Answer:
<em>What would your sister say, which path leads to safety?</em>
Explanation:
"The identical twins" is a famous riddle in many countries and with many variations, but the core remains the same; one twin always lies, the other one always tells the truth.
So, the correct question to answer would be: "What would your sister say, which path leads to safety?", and whatever answer may be, you always take the other path.
Let's make the presumption that the right path is towards safety. If you ask the truth-telling twin what would her sister say, she knows that her sister would lie and that she would say the left. Since she always tells the truth her answer would be left.
If you ask the lying sister the same question, she knows that her sister would say the right way, but because she lies, her answer would be the left.
So, both sisters will answer identically to this question so the only thing to do now is to take the another path.
A poem about cat with 3 stanze and rhyming in one line word in each stanze 3 line is described below.
Explanation:
1. A three line stanza is called a tercet. A four line stanza is a quatrain, and a five line stanza is a quintet.
2. 3 line stanzas are called Tercets. A stanza in poetry is a group of lines usually separated by a blank line. Stanzas of 3 lines are called Tercets from the Latin word tertius meaning three.
3. A poem or stanza with one line is called a monostich, one with two lines is a couplet; with three, tercet or triplet; four, quatrain. six, hexastich; seven, heptastich; eight, octave.
4. A monostich has been described as 'a startling fragment that has its own integrity'[2] and 'if a monostich has an argument, it is necessarily more subtle.'[3]
A monostich could be also titled; due to the brevity of the form, the title is invariably as important a part of the poem as the verse itself:[4]
5. Some one line poems have 'the characteristics of not exceeding one line of a normal page, to be read as one unbroken line without forced pauses or the poetics of caesura', and others having ' a rhythm, (as with one-line haiku), dividing easily into three phrases'
Answer 4 would be the correctly punctuated sentence.
Young even being children is the answer