AP Poetry Terms - hudson.eduwww.hudson.edu/custom_users/kellerd/AP/Terms/AP%20Poetry%20Terms.htm<span>l. alliteration- the repetition of identical or similar consonant sounds, normally at the ... abcd with four feet in lines one and three and three feet in lines two and four. ... of sound are rhyme, alliteration, assonance, consonance, and onomatopoeia. The devices are used for many reasons, including to create a general effect of ...</span>
I'm trying to decide between A and C, but I believe it is C.
In my point of view and opinion, I think that the poet is trying to encourage the reader to examine the poet carefully because the poet wants the reader to understand the point of the poet. What the poet connects to and what is the meaning behind the poet that is written. Hope This Helps!!
Answer:
A parselmouth is a wizard or witch with the ability to understand and talk to snakes (using Parseltongue).
Explanation:
Answer:
D). Narrative
Explanation:
Prose poetry is classified under the genre of hybrid writing as it is a poetry that is written in the form of prose with keeping the poetic qualities(imagery, symbols, figure or speeches, emotional effects) intact. The key purpose of such a genre is to deliver a specific idea or narrate a story and thus, the key focus is on establishing a 'narrative' that clearly conveys the information to the readers. It is for this reason, the lines are not broken in verse form and presented in a prose manner. Since a prose poem is not as long as a narrative text, it does not have time to introduce the readers to the setting or characters. A Rhyming pattern is not followed as there is no use of verse form despite the use of poetic devices. Thus, <u>option D</u> is the correct answer.