Answer:
C?
Explanation:
I haven't read these texts, so I have no context whatsoever, but C makes the most sense in my opinion.
-hope it helps
False, you have put the information you find online in your own words and add the works cited of where you found your info.
You can summarize and paraphrase or directly quote.
To directly quote, use parentheses to separate the citation from the text. Then place the author's name or the name of the source inside, and if it is a book, include the page number(s). Hope this helps!
-Dylan (AKA Animus)
The answer is: D. A line of iambic pentameter contains five feet, with the unstressed syllable following the stressed syllable.
Iambic pentametric is a traditional kind of metric line in English poetry and verse. It involves a line of five feet or syllables - one unstressed syllable followed by a stressed one.
The rest of the alternatives are incorrect because they refer to three, four and six feet, and some of them state that the unstressed syllable comes after the stressed syllable.