An exposition is a settling fourth of meaning or intent
The best revision of the statement "Children seem to like me, and I don't mind hanging out with them. It's pretty easy to keep them amused" is:
Children seem to like me, and it's pretty easy to work with them.
<em>This revision deletes the phrase "I don't mind hanging out with them", that phrase is not really necessary since it was already stated that children liked the person. It is logical that the person doesn't mind hanging out with someone who likes him/her. Also, the phrase "it's pretty easy to keep them amused" suggests that working with them is easy. At the end of the day, the key to work with children is being able to keep them amused, in other words, getting and keeping their attention. </em>
Is that a question what are we supposed to solve?
Answer:
stanza
Explanation:
The number of lines within a stanza can change depending on the type of poem and even the type of stanza the peta wants to make. Sonnets, for example, present 4 stanzas with different numbers of lines between them. Other types of poems have a free pattern of lines that depend on the choice of the author for that theme.
The stanzas are named by the number of lines it has, so we can classify them as: couplet (2 lines), tercet (3 lines), quatrain (4 lines), cinquain (5 lines), sestet (6 lines, sometimes it's called a sexain), septet (7 lines), octave (8 lines).