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15. what is the rhyme scheme of the poem? * 1 point a. aaaabbbbb b. aba…

Question

  1. what is the rhyme scheme of the poem? *

1 point
a. aaaabbbbb
b. ababcdcd
c. aabbccdd
d. abcdabcd

  1. which of the following lines from the text is an example of alliteration? *

1 point
a. \then leaf subsides to leaf\
b. \her hardest hue to hold\
c. \her early leaf’s a flower\
d. \so eden sank to grief\

  1. which of the following best paraphrases this quotation from line one? *

1 point

ature’s first green is gold\
a. nature is beautiful and should be appreciated.
b. the first leaves of spring & new life are precious.
c. green trees and plants can appear gold in color.
d. green trees and plants are worth a lot of money

Explanation:

Response
Question 15
Brief Explanations

To determine the rhyme scheme, we analyze the end - rhymes of a poem (assuming it's a common poem like "Nothing Gold Can Stay" by Robert Frost). In "Nothing Gold Can Stay", the rhyme scheme is ABAB CDCD. Let's check the options:

  • Option a (AAAABBBBB) implies a large number of consecutive same rhymes, which is not the case here.
  • Option b (ABAB CDCD) matches the typical rhyme scheme of this poem.
  • Option c (AABBCCDD) is a couplet - based rhyme scheme, not what we see in this poem.
  • Option d (ABCDABCD) is a different pattern, not matching the poem's rhyme.
Brief Explanations

Alliteration is the repetition of initial consonant sounds.

  • Option a: "Then leaf subsides to leaf" has no repeated initial consonant sounds.
  • Option b: "Her hardest hue to hold" has the repeated initial 'h' sound in "Her", "hardest", "hue", and "hold", so this is alliteration.
  • Option c: "Her early leaf’s a flower" has no repeated initial consonant sounds.
  • Option d: "So Eden sank to grief" has no repeated initial consonant sounds.
Brief Explanations

The line "Nature’s first green is gold" from "Nothing Gold Can Stay" is about the preciousness of the first green (new growth, spring leaves) which is compared to gold (something valuable).

  • Option a: The line is not about appreciating nature in a general sense, but about the value of new growth.
  • Option b: The first leaves of spring (new life) are precious, which matches the meaning of the line as gold represents value.
  • Option c: The line is not about the color appearance of green trees as gold, but about the value of new growth.
  • Option d: The line has nothing to do with the monetary worth of green trees and plants.

Answer:

b. ABAB CDCD

Question 16