I just took the test and I am sure these are the answers
<u>1 is anaphora (I actually found this answer on bing)</u>
<u>2 is wicked (I had trouble finding the answer for this one)</u>
<u>3 is off-rhymes (My thanks to Xiaray)</u>
<u>4 is assonance (I found this in my lesson)</u>
Well if you still don't believe me after this.... I guess I might as well give you the explanations from my test. Lol here they are:
<em>1 Walt Whitman was the first American poet to rely extensively on this technique in poetry, though many poets use it today.</em>
<em>2 Both the sound and the meaning of this word suggest a sense of concern that there is evil around.</em>
<em>3 "Comb" and "on" do not rhyme exactly; nor do "seen" and "feet." However, the placement of these words at the ends of lines have a similar effect to regular rhymes.</em>
<em>4 The long e sound (ee) invokes the expression Eeeek! which humans sometimes say, spontaneously, when caught off-guard by something scary.</em>
Here are the answers for those people like me who search for the answer they are looking for, and just can't find it