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19 January, 06:24

Your mother Eire is always young,

Dew ever shining and twilight gray;

Though hope fall from you or love decay,

Burning in fires of a slanderous tongue.

Which pattern describes the rhyme scheme of this stanza?

ABAB

AABB

ABBA

AXAX

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Answers (2)
  1. 19 January, 08:13
    0
    This one is an abba, if you want to know an easy way to tell the last word rhymes with another word so when you come to the end of a line start with A then read the next if the word at the end rhymes it is also A but if it doesn't make it B and so on.

    Example:

    tree A

    root B

    bee A

    boot B
  2. 19 January, 09:22
    0
    The correct answer is ABBA

    Explanation:

    Rhyme occurs when there are similar or the same sounds in a poem. Moreover, a rhyme scheme occurs when the same sounds are repeated at the end of verses in a stanza (groups of verses). This can be identified if you use letters from A to Z to mark the same sounds. In this way, in the stanza presented the scheme is ABBA as shown below:

    Your mother Eire is always young, (A)

    Dew ever shining and twilight gray; (B)

    Though hope fall from you or love decay, (B)

    Burning in fires of a slanderous tongue. (A)

    Considering "young" and "tongue" rhyme and these verses should be marked with A, while "gray" and "decay" rhyme and should be marked with B.
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