I've been meaning to <em>ask you</em>
If that's not too <em>drastical</em>
wonder if it's <em>okay</em>
To pick you up by<em> eight</em>
The rhyme scheme of this poem is AABB. The rhyme in this poem is achieved by the pronounciation and stress put into "ask you"; stressing ASK and then stressing the first syllabe of "drastical" and this way the rhyme on the first two lines is completed. Then for the last two lines the rhyme is achieved and the whole stanza resolved by stressing "okAY" and then "Eight".
Meter:
The stanza's meter is trochaic tetrameter (4 trochees, 8 syllables)
<em>I</em><em>'ve</em> <em>been </em>| <em>meaning</em><em> </em>| <em>to</em> | ask you
if that's | not | too | drastical
wonder | if | it's | okay
To pick | you up | by | eight
This rhyme scheme and meter are most used by rap artist for it's impact and flexibility to create a rhyme. The stressed words are the ones that address the receiver of the message that is a proposition for a meeting or a date. This poem is fitting for the rap music genre, for it's pronounciation of key words (with a suburban accent) completes the rhyme in the second and third lines ("oKAY" and "DRAStical").
Setting: Forest(?)
Protagonist: Randall
Conflict: Lost in the forest with no food
Mood: Really depends on how you view it
Climax: Maybe remembering that his father taught him to seek water?
Falling action: I don't see anything else after that. Is there more to the story?
Resolution: Found his mother
Theme: Boy gets lost after not listening to his mother and bringing his whistle
A.) I was thrilled to find my keys they had been lost since yesterday.
This is a "fused sentence" or also known as a run-on sentence.
Answer:
Sue discovered that a loose screw was causing her desk to wobble.
Explanation:
Answer:
1, 2 & 4 are the right answer choices