The correct answer is B. An iamb consists of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable.
An iamb consists of two syllables, the first of which is short (unstressed) followed by a long (stressed) syllable. Shakespeare used iambic pentameter in most of his poetry, and it can certainly be found in your example - Sonnet 29 "When, in Disgrace with Fortune and Men's Eyes."
Answer:
Here are a few rhymes:
Explanation:
"So I checked my resume"
"Then I had a bad day"
"The memory was left on replay"
"So I pretended to be Addison Rae"
"He/she had me some type of way"
"The sun was shining a beautiful ray"
"So I started to do the Whip/nae nae"
Bam
Explanation:
There is no description of the wind looking like a woman, especially because in these lines the wind is male. The grass is not described as standing or being upright. Also, the way the grass moves is being described, not the way the wind feels.
The answer is B, He thinks she is proud of her husband's wealth and social position. I just took the test and I got this right :)