LITERATURE QUESTIONS
MISCELLENEOUS QUESTIONS
Question
[CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
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first
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second
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third
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None of the above
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Detailed explanation-1: -In prosody, the term iambic became known in the sixteenth century to define a poetic foot of two syllables wherein the first syllable is short, also known as unstressed and unaccented, and the second syllable is long, known as stressed and accented.
Detailed explanation-2: -First, the “iamb.” An iamb is one single foot, or beat. It is made up of two parts, or two syllables. The first is an unstressed syllable and the second is a stressed syllable. The sound these two parts make together is most often associated with the sound of a heartbeat.
Detailed explanation-3: -Iambic Pentameter Examples This line of poetry has five feet, so it’s written in pentameter. And the stressing pattern is all iambs (an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable): Shall I | compARE | thee TO | a SUM | mers DAY?
Detailed explanation-4: -…the most common English metre, iambic pentameter, is a line of ten syllables or five iambic feet. Each iambic foot is composed of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable.
Detailed explanation-5: -You need five stressed syllables (“feet”) for iambic pentameter. “Pentameter” refers to the five stressed syllables per line. “Iambic” means the stress is on the latter syllable of two syllables.