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CAHSEE ELA: Literary Genres Drill 6, Problem 2. Which of the following is a characteristic of dramatic monologue?
CAHSEE ELA: Literary Genres Drill 6, Problem 3. The previous passage is an example of...what?
CAHSEE ELA Literary Genres Drill 6, Problem 5. What is the difference between a novel and a novella?
CAHSEE ELA 6.1 Literary Genres 437 Views
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CAHSEE ELA: Literary Genres Drill 6, Problem 1. The previous poem is an example of...what?
Transcript
- 00:03
Here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by William Shakespeare. He certainly was obsessed
- 00:08
with iambic pentameter. He had a real bee in his sonnet.
- 00:17
The previous poem is an example of—what?
- 00:25
To pinpoint the answer to this question, we've got to google our brains
- 00:28
for the meaning of each of these poetic terms.
Full Transcript
- 00:32
Armed with these definitions, the elimination process is a snap.
- 00:37
We'll knock out choice (C) first. The "couple" in "couplet" reminds us that
- 00:42
the term refers to two lines of verse that usually have the same meter and rhyme.
- 00:48
The poem above has way more than two lines...
- 00:50
So we're positive we can get rid of answer (C).
- 00:53
(B) isn't looking so great either. A limerick is usually a short and funny poem.
- 00:58
The poem above is neither of those things, making (B) incorrect.
- 01:02
We can also take (D) out of the running, since we know that ballads are poems or songs that
- 01:07
tell stories.
- 01:08
The poem above is way more concerned with philosophizing about love than telling us a story.
- 01:13
Answer (A) is the way to go. Fourteen lines with an "a-b-a-b c-d-c-d e-f-e-f g-g" structure
- 01:20
means that this poem is an English sonnet.
- 01:23
The poem totally follows these rules, so (A) is the correct answer.
- 01:27
"a-b-a-b c-d-c-d"...man, whoever created the English sonnet must've loved alphabet soup.
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