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I am light and opened minded. I like Music and Reading,especially poems. I like Movie (Drama). I hate pretending.
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"He held on to the rainbow that was hope" could work, poetically, in some types of writing. However, it doesn't seem a natural or common enough metaphor to be used willy-nilly in ordinary everyday English. If you plonked it into
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I wouldn't tie myself up in knots trying to interpret 400 year old poetry in terms of modern usage and grammar. Still, if you must, here's a site that attempts to translate Shakespeare (Hamlet in this case) into modern English.
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The animals are written as; the royal bengal tiger, the burdened elephant, the ox. Those are fine. There are cases where in poetry certain important nouns are capitalized, but I would not do it for this assignment. If you have further doubts
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foot: the basic unit of verse meter consisting of any of various fixed combinations or groups of stressed and unstressed or long and short syllables. (www.m-w.com) In other words, a foot of poetry can be thought of as a rhythm that is repeated
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Hi,
Have a look here.
http://www.types-of-poetry.org.uk/64-foot-literary-term.htm
Clive
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Does the following stand for: American, British and Canadian English? In English titles the initial letters of the first word and of all nouns, pronouns (except the relative 'that'), adjectives, verbs, adverbs, and subordinating
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
sevilla
56 days ago
Articles, Capital Letters, Possessives, Prepositions, Nouns, Pronouns, Adverbs, British English, Determiners, Adjectives, Writing, United States, Great Britain, American, Poetry
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Yes, your rhythm is off in many places. A sonnet doesn't have to be strictly iambic pentameter (or it would sound fake). But that rhythm should dominate. I think we can sharpen the pattern (and the sense). Remember, you want the pattern:
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We have to write a sonnet with Iambic Pentameter in English and I'm horrible with the stressed and unstressed syllables, please help me.
Each one is an ad ven ture for your joy , To tra vel the world and go un seen pla ces. These take
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The Little Boy
Ball of yarn in one hand
A wooden sword in the other
One tug of the yarn
Secured around the kitchen table
He looks out the open door
And waits…
For the courage that is there
To build up
And launch him
- English Test
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