Thank you lord lord please thank you lord lord for that you lord
The statement best describes the rhyme scheme of "A Thought on the Inestimable Blessing of Reason " is:
C. There is a series of consecutive rhyming couplets.
The poem is in ‘slant rhyme’ with the ABAB rhyme scheme. It is sometimes called lazy rhyme, half rhyme, imperfect rhyme or near rhyme. When the rhyme is formed by identical sound words and not similar sound words, they are in Slant rhyme.
The rhyming words in the first two lines are ‘soul, pole’; in the second two lines are ‘cause, laws’; in the third two lines are ‘given, heaven’; in the fourth two lines are ‘light, bright.’ The other two lines in the poem follow the same rhyme scheme.
ANSWER: A, A, NA, A
sentence: silly sissy sits straight on a stool
Laws can force people to not act upon their beliefs, but the beliefs still resonate. I think a great example of this is prejudice. We make laws to combat discrimination, but we know there is still a generation out there that thinks a certain way. I guess my point is, if we had the power to change what someone thinks, then we can change how they act. Thus how they think is more important.
Answer:
- Read & review the notes
- Bring your NOTES!
- Support opinions with evidence, making it more factual
Example: I believe that phones should be banned in schools because the London School of Economics says it proves to be disruptive in an educational environment, as well as a prof. from Lee University said that
- Responding thoughtfully to your peers
Example: I agree with the fact that phones should be banned in school, but to be more eco-friendly, perhaps devices from the school with restrictions on websites would be great.
Happy learning!
--Applepi101