the last words of your lines are shame, lust, blame, trust rhyme scheme is where you match up which words ending is similar to the another so since shame has the same sounding ending its is A and since lust and trust have the same type of ending it is B and if you find another one that similar to A you mark it A but if it doesn't match up with any of the other endings you write another letter such as C and so on
Thoreau means when he says the line “as for work, we haven’t any of any consequence” is all work that we do is trivial and meaningless. He also means that there is not any work of importance, it is all trivial and meaningless. Henry David Thoreau is an essayist, historian, surveyor, naturalist, tax resister, philosopher, and poet.
The title's alliteration is picked up by Owen's use of repeated consonants. In the poem's last lines, he returns to the two divisive, abstract nouns, "Dulce" and "Decorum," which have the meanings "sweet" and "honorable."
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What is an Alliterative sound?</h3>
Alliteration refers to the continual repetition of consonants form the beginning of two or more words.
They are also called rhymes.
Learn more about Alliterative sounds at;
brainly.com/question/536028
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Answer: approximation
Explanation if you read through the passage it talks about how to determine an approximate story line Good luck!!