Swift uses satire to reveal his belief that English landlords often take advantage of their Irish tenants.
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Answer:
Alliteration, Repetition, Rhyme.
Explanation:
The given lines of poetry are taken from Rupert Brooke's poem "The Great Lover".
Alliteration- This is a technique when the same first letter of a given word is used again in the next word or close quarters. So, the alliteration in the given lines of poetry is <em>"radiant raindrops/ couching.. cool/ sway.. sunny"</em> etc. While radiant and raindrops start with "R", couching and cool starts with "C" and sway and sunny starts with "S". This is a pattern of alliteration.
Repetition is the use of the same word/ words in a consecutive pattern or a short space of the poem. This is used at times to emphasize the word. The repeated word in the given lines of poetry is "flowers"
Rhyme is the similarity in the sounds in the lines. This correspondence of such similar-sounding end words especially in lines of poetry is identified as the rhyme scheme. The rhyme in the given lines of poetry is in the words "flowers" and "hours" that have the same end-sound.
Answer:"Bold" was all I could think about his plan
To just go fishing and not go to school
Brilliant was what it was - on or off hand -
All who saw it that day thought it was cool
Worms was what was lacking - and that was all
So I dug around until bait was had
Slimy things fishing worms, just a gross ball,
But it's a thing for bringing fish to hand
So slipping out a school room door that day-
Two boys, a can of worms, a fishing plan -
Until Mrs Smith then caught on to our play
And stuck a hand into our wormy can
Sounds that I did not know - but did Mrs Smith
Still may stay in that school room air forthwith
Explanation:
Subject of a verb.
Object of a verb.
Complement of a verb.
Object of a preposition.
Be in apposition to another noun.
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