Answer:
Robert Frost- end rhyme
Percy Bysshe Shelley- internal rhyme
Samuel Taylor Coleridge- alliteration
Explanation:
Frost's poem has rhyming lines, and every other line rhymes at the end.
Snow and below are rhymes in Shelley's poem. Because one is in the middle and one is on the end, that's internal rhyme.
Alliteration is the repetition of a letter or sound. (furrow followed free)
Hope this helps!
Answer:
1. Experimenting
2. Avoiding
3. Initiating
4. Intensifying
5. Terminating
6. Bonding
7. Circumscribing
8. Integrating
9. Differentiating
10. Stagnating
Explanation:
1. Experimenting: asking questions to clarify initial perceptions. An experiment can be defined as an investigation which typically involves the process of manipulating an independent variable (the cause) in order to be able to determine or measure the dependent variable (the effect). This ultimately implies that, an experiment can be used by scientists to show or demonstrate how a condition causes or gives rise to another i.e cause and effect, influence, behavior, etc in a sample.
2. Avoiding: people do not want to spend time together. This arises when there's some sort of misunderstanding or disagreement between two or more parties.
3. Initiating: first stage of relationship development. This is the stage when people start to get to know each other or establish an acquaintance.
4. Intensifying: involves an increase in personal involvement. This is an increase in the level of devotion to something.
5. Terminating: end of the relationship. This brings an end to a shared mutual feeling between two or more individuals.
6. Bonding: relationship becomes more formal, publicly recognized.
7. Circumscribing: talk is reduced to everyday matters. It is a form of limitation drawn into issues i.e narrowing the frequency of conversations.
8. Integrating: stage in which "in-language" usually emerges.
9. Differentiating: people begin to pursue outside interests.
10. Stagnating: people go through the motions of being committed.
The correct answer here is the third one: Limited omniscient. We know this because a narrator who knows everything about all the characters is all knowing, or omniscient and a narrator whose knowledge is limited to one character, either major or minor, has a limited omniscient point of view.This text is a perfect example of an omniscient limited. I hope this helps
Paekche is correct i think. Never remeber them in that section.