129k views
5 votes
Drag the tiles to the boxes to form correct pears identify the type of poetic foot used in each expert

User Zvisofer
by
6.1k points

1 Answer

7 votes

Hello. You did not present the answer options, which makes it impossible for your question to be answered. However, I will try to help you in the best possible way.

Poetic foot is the term used to describe the measure that determines the syllabic accent in a verse of a poem, that is, the poetic foot determines where are the stressed and non-stressed syllable that are able to rhythmize the poem. there are three types of poetic foot, which are:

Iamb: It occurs in verses that have a non-stressed syllable accompanied by an stressed syllable. For example: If you consider capital letters as stressed syllable references, a verse with iamb would have the following rhythm dun-DUN.dun-DUN.dun-DUN.

Trochee: presents the opposite of iamb and shows a stressed syllable accompanied by a non-stressed syllable. Using the same example, a verse that presents this poetic foot would have the rhythm as DUN-dun.DUN-dun.DUN-dun.

Pyrrhic: presents two unstressed syllables next to each other. Therefore, the rhythm of this verse is dun-dun.dun-dun.

Dactyl: It presents a stressed syllable followed by its non-stressed syllables. In this case, the timing is DUN-dun-dun.Dun-dun-dun.

Anapest: Presents two non-stressed syllables followed by a stressed syllable. In this case, we can perceive a rhythm equal to dun-dun-DUN.dun-dun-DUN.

Spondee: It presents two stressed syllables next to each other. The rimization in this case is DUN-DUN.DUN-DUN

It is important to note that stressed syllables are those that are spoken with the strongest and have a louder sound, unlike unstressed syllables. Therefore, to answer this question, you should recite the verses out loud and identify what type of rhythm they have.

User Shahriar Shojib
by
6.0k points