Answer:
c
Explanation:
credible sources shouldn't be opinionated
Answer: (Poem is about very harsh sea waves)
The ferocious roar,
comes crashing across the harbour,
its wide wings spread across the land,
On sudden haunches it arrives,
then silently leaves,
left no trace
Sorry if its bad
Answer:
a. wide-eyed clowns honk noses no
b. toddlers shriek with glee no
c. rogue balloon stops with a pop no
<u>d.</u> a big band blares its harmony yes
Explanation:
Alliteration is a series of words that include repetition of the same first letter, NOT sound (rhyme). Repetition of sounds in a series of words is known as assonance. Both of these branches of figurative language are similar but NOT THE SAME. Anyway, in the first choice, there is no repetition: "w", "e", "c", "h", "n". Same goes with the next two. Choice B: "t", "s", "w", "g". Choice C: "r", "b", "s", "w", "a", "p". However in answer choice d, the words "big", "band", and "blares" all start with b.
Answer:
Line numbers 34 and 36 has internal rhymes.
"For the moon never beams, without bringing me dreams"
"And the stars never rise, but I feel the bright eyes."
Explanation:
Internal rhyme in poetry is a form of a rhyme scheme that involves the words in the middle of a line of poetry to rhyme with a word at the end of the same line. This means that the middle word will rhyme with the end word of the same line.
In the poem "Annabel Lee" by Edgar Allan Poe, we can see this internal rhyme in the lines <em>"For the moon never beams, without bringing me dreams" and</em> "<em>And the stars never rise, but I feel the bright eyes.</em>" The rhymes are seen in the words <u>"beams" and "dreams" </u>and then again in <u>"rise" and "eyes"</u>.
Thus, the internal rhymes in the poem are seen in line numbers 34 and 36.