A rhyming couplet in iambic pentameter is "double, double, toil an trouble".
<h3>What is a couplet?</h3>
It should be noted that a couplet simply means a successive part of the lines of a verse hat are typically of same length.
In this case, the rhyming couplet in iambic pentameter is illustrated above.
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Where's the passage?
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The correct answer is definitely "a certain <u>sinister</u> block of building", since the word "sinister" immediately creates a sense of disturbance and dread. Then it goes on to describe the building in more details, increasing the claustrophobic sense of the setting in which he's in.
<u>Gothic literature</u><u> often plays on the sense of wonder and fear that it can generate on the reader both from the contents of the stories as much as the language employed</u>. Utilizing words with gruesome, mysterious or frightening connotations is just as important.
Hope this helps!
Hope this helps!
This one time I was walking upstairs to go to my class and I started running so I would'nt be late. So when i was running up the stairs I tripped and with me tripped 2 other kids that we're infront of me luckily I did'nt hurt myself. I was late to class because of what had happened. Just when I thought things couldn't get anyworse I was walking into class and the teacher screamed at me I got scared and farted infront of the whole class. Everybody laughed at me while i was standing there embrassed i didn't talk or look at anyone for the rest of the class.
Juliek says: "This ceremony, will it be over soon? I'm hungry..." Juliek says this as they are watching a young man be hanged, that is, as someone else is dying. This passage shows that the callousness of life in the concentration camp is creating, that makes death a commonplace situation and a regular sight. While a young man is being hanged, Juliek thinks of himself and in something trivial, like his hunger.. He is wishing for the "ceremony", as he described the hanging, to be over soon in order to satisfy his personal and bodily needs, not acknowledging for a single moment the fact that they are witnessing someone’s death.