This short poem has End Rhymes, meaning that the rhymes are located at the end of each line. In this case, 'shine' and 'mine' rhyme and are located at the ends of each line.
In 1840, the transcendentalist periodical <em>The Dial </em>was founded, and in that same year it published "Orphic Sayings" by Amos Bronson Alcott.
<em>The Dial </em>was a journal that supported the transcendentalists' philosophy, influenced by Immanuel Kant. Transcendentalism believes in the inherent goodness of people and nature and reinforces the idea that society is capable of corrupting the soul of an individual. Furthermore,<u> "Orphic Sayings" was one of Alcott's contribution to </u><u><em>The Dial. </em></u><em> </em>Alcott's work got favorable reviews and was considered highly valuable for its philosophy. In that way,<u> "Orphic Sayings" was famous for expressing the mystical idealism of the author</u>. The last "Orphic Sayings" was published in 1842.
Answer:
The answer would be use line breaks and possibly even rhyme to coney the story.
Explanation:
It's kinda obvious lol. That's how poems are written.
Answer:
there ya go!
Explanation:
Kyla and Daniel/<u>have enjoyed</u>
curious students/<u>listened</u>
Basquiat skateboards/<u>in front</u>
Eight different people/<u>teach</u>
Harry/<u>moved</u>
Eleanor and Rebeka/<u>make</u>
Hope this helps ya!!
First you must know what a pronoun is.. here are some examples:
I, me, he, she, herself, you, it, that, they, each, few, many, who, whoever, whose, someone, everyone, etc.
In this sentence you see only one pronoun, at the end of the sentence, "hers."
You may already know this, but possessive means "in possession of" and the word "hers" in this sentence means that she is in possession of the pasta with the grilled chicken on it.
I hope I helped! (: