A. The narrator responds to his fear by staying in the big room to learn more.
Answer:
1. five feet - pentameter
2. one foot - monometer
3. two feet - dimeter
4. seven feet - heptameter
5. four feet - tetrameter
6. three feet - trimeter
7. six feet - hexameter
8. eight feet - octameter
Explanation:
<u>This question refers to meter in poetry, which is done by counting the number of syllables.</u> However, different types of meter will count syllables in different ways. An iambic pentameter, for example, will consider an unstressed syllable plus a stressed one as one foot. Each line will repeat that pattern five times, which is why it is called pentameter.
<u>To match the columns above, we need to know the meaning of the different prefixes used:</u>
<u>mono - one</u>
<u>di - two</u>
<u>tri - three</u>
<u>tetra - four</u>
<u>penta - five</u>
<u>hexa - six</u>
<u>hepta - seven</u>
<u>octa - eight</u>
Remember that those same prefixes are used in other fields of knowledge? For instance, in geometry, a pentagon is a figure with five sides and five angles.
Answer:
C) local people getting organized
Explanation:
Answer:
The sentence it will introduce will be contrasting to the sentence(s) before that.
Explanation:
E.g. I woke up late. <em>However</em>, I got to school on time.
["However" here contrasted the idea that "I" might be late for school since "I" woke up late]
Answer:
<h3>Would is ur answer to the question </h3>