Read the final lines of "One True Friend," by Etta-May Spenser. Answer the question that follows: Though I'd never confide all my feelings inside, To everyone I ever knew. You are my one true friend and I swear till the end: I'll never keep secrets from you.
The author uses the same poetic device in line 1 and line 3. Which choice best explains the device she repeats and the reason she does so? She uses alliteration to create a lounge twister to make a serious topic more playful. She uses assonance to slow down the rhythm so the reader lingers on every word. She uses consonance so the words flow together as one and create a unified rhythm. She uses internal rhyme to quicken the pace and create a sense of anticipation.
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It's definitely not B
A?
its A
Thanks:) sorry i took so long my mom wanted me to clean my room. can you help me with 2 more?
@brucebaner
its okay
Read the following excerpt from "The Cloud," by Percy Bysshe Shelley. Answer the question that follows: I am the daughter of Earth and Water, And the nursling of the Sky; I passed through the pores of the oceans and shores; I change, but I cannot die. The first and third lines of the stanza feature examples of alliteration end rhyme internal rhyme repetition
It's definitely not A
C?
What do you think @brucebaner?
Or what about this one? Read the opening lines of "Fame is a Fickle Food," by Emily wingspaninson. Answer the question that follows: Fame is a fickle food Upon a shifting plate The first line in this stanza features an example of alliteration assonance consonance repetition
It can't be C, B?
@brucebaner what do you think?
@brucebaner are you there?
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