The poetic technique that Robert Browning used in his poem "My Last Duchess" is <span>enjambment.
</span>That
technique means that the thought found in one line of the poem does not
end with the end of that line, but rather continues into the following
line. There are no harsh endings of thought at the end of one line.
Answer:
Ok now I see what you mean.
Explanation:
Bella: Hey Darnell how are you doing?
Darnell: I'm doing ok...
Ariel: Are you sure you seem a little down.
Darnell: Well now that you've brought it up..
Bella: Yea?
Darnell: Yesterday they held basketball tryouts for the new team.
Ariel: Mhm?
Darnell: Well I've always wanted to be on a team, so I tried out.
Bella: And then?...
Darnell: Well today I got the news that I didn't make the team.
Ariel: What?! Why not?! I've seen you play and you are amazing!
Bella: Yea me too!
Darnell: Well I guess I wasn't good enough for coach.
Ariel: Well don't let him bring you down! Let's go play at the park!
Bella: Ooohh yea that sounds fun!
Darnell: Alright let's go!
Narrator: Bella, Ariel, and Darnell started playing basketball at the park everyday after school to get Darnell practiced. Then the next year tryouts were held for the team Darnell tried again and got on the team! You see practice makes perfect!
<span>Scholaticism merges theology- specifically Christian theology- with Aristotelian logic. Theological truth guides Aristotelian inquiry in this particular methodology. One notable example is Thomas Aquinas. Yet the same can be said for the muslims, such as Averroes and Avicenna, who around the same general time, sought to apply Aristotelian logic within their own theological systems.</span>
Answer:
In rhetoric and argumentation, a claim is an arguable statement—an idea that a rhetor (a speaker or writer) asks an audience to accept.