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question 5 of 10 shakespeares use of more than 10 syllables per line: a…

Question

question 5 of 10
shakespeares use of more than 10 syllables per line:

a. draws attention to the line, perhaps making it seem more
important.

b. confuses the meaning of the line, making the reader
uncomfortable.

c. indicates to the audience that hes making fun of someone or
something.

d. elevates the language, making it seem more refined and elegant.

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

In Shakespeare's works, using more than 10 syllables per line (a deviation from the usual iambic pentameter) is a deliberate stylistic choice. Option A is correct because such a deviation draws the reader's or audience's attention to that line, emphasizing its importance (e.g., for a key idea, emotion, or character moment). Option B is incorrect as it doesn't confuse meaning; Option C is incorrect as it's not about mocking; Option D is incorrect as syllable count excess doesn't relate to "refined/elegant" in that way.

Answer:

A. draws attention to the line, perhaps making it seem more important.