Answer:
If a poem has six feet, it has twelve syllables.
Explanation:
In poetry, we have different kinds of feet. Since your question does not mention any specific type, let's assume it refers to the most common one, the iambic foot. A iambic foot is constituted of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed one. If you have an iambic tetrameter (tetra means four), that means your have 4 feet, or four pairs of syllables. If it is an iambic pentameter, you will have 5 feet. According to your question, the poem has 6 feet. Therefore, it has 6 pairs of syllables or, in other words, twelve syllables. An example of a line with 6 feet would be (the stressed syllables are in bold):
The things / which I / have seen / I now / can see / no more. -- William Wordsworth
<span>In the 16th century, the Catholic Church had a practice of selling indulgences. An indulgence was a payment to the church that paid for you to be exempted from certain sins. Sometimes they could pay for a loved one to spend less time in purgatory.
Luther’s thesis 82 was aimed at the Pope, asking why the Pope doesn’t deliver ALL souls at the same time out of purgatory to relieve their misery. Is he only saving a few souls at a time so that he can get more money for the Catholic Church, thus exposing evil practices of the Catholic Church at that time.</span>
Answer:
The Code of Hammurabi refers to a set of rules or laws enacted by the Babylonian King Hammurabi (reign 1792-1750 B.C.). The code governed the people living in his fast-growing empire. Scholars widely believe that other, now lost, steles would have existed in other cities in Babylon that were controlled by Hammurabi.
Explanation:
Answer: The answer would be "The Dervish gets angry at Baba Abdalla"
Explanation:
The answer is AABB because "secure" rhymes with "sure" and "keeps" rhymes with "sleeps". If it were ABAB the ending lines would need to alternate, should it be ABCD all the ending words would be different. If it were ABBA, the first and fourth would rhyme and the second and third would rhyme.