thank you for the rep!
Good Morning ...
How r u ?
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Oh thanks!!! been trying to give you one for a longggg time now!
your welcome
You're welcome!
Maybe u need to come !!!
You are still my only friend, boo hoo, but I gotta say I sure do appreciate that
Likewise here, just playin' around, lookin' to build some rep. Thanks for you contributions by the way!
anytime, you really make me laugh somedays, I enjoy this site
Who are you callin' an old dog? LOL
I did 2 look it up lol
haha thanks for the rep!
ambic pentameter is a type of meter that is used in poetry and drama. It describes a particular rhythm that the words establish in each line. That rhythm is measured in small groups of syllables; these small groups of syllables are called 'feet'. The word 'iambic' describes the type of foot that is used. The word 'pentameter' indicates that a line has five of these 'feet'. Shakespeare is famous for this method of writing in his plays. Different languages express rhythm in different ways. In Ancient Greek and Latin, the rhythm is created through the alternation of short and long syllables. In English, the rhythm is created through the use of stress, alternating between unstressed and stressed syllables. An English unstressed syllable is equivalent to a classical short syllable, while an English stressed syllable is equivalent to a classical long syllable. If a pair of syllables are arranged in a short followed by a long, or an unstressed followed by a stressed, pattern, that foot is said to be 'iambic'. The English word 'trapeze' is an example of an iambic pair of syllables, since the word is made up of two syllables ("tra—peze") and is pronounced with the stress on the second syllable ("tra—PEZE", rather than "TRA—peze"). 'Iambic pentameter', then, is a line made up of five pairs of short/long, or unstressed/stressed, syllables. If the short/long or unstressed/stressed pattern were to be reversed, producing a line of five pairs of long/short, or stressed/unstressed pairs, that line would be described as an example of trochaic pentameter. A trochee (DUM—de) is the opposite of an iamb (de—DUM). These terms originally applied to the quantitative meter of classical Greek poetry. They were adopted to describe the equivalent meters in English accentual-syllabic verse. Iambic rhythms come relatively naturally in English. Iambic pentameter is among the most common metrical forms in English poetry; it is used in many of the major English poetic forms, including blank verse, the heroic couplet, and some of the traditional rhymed stanza forms. Ha Ha Ha Ha....
ur welcome, have a goo day.
Blue hearts, yellow stars...where's the green clovers? Saving them for Lucky Charms I guess lol
Your welcome ..and please don't ask me to explain how it works now LOL I have no clue! but I'm sure you'll figure out haha I still don't know what they're for, but at least the colours are pretty lol
Good morning ....Thanks for bonus code ..... have wonderful weekend will get 2500 bonus fairview mall sat ..... Romeo
Thank for the bonus code got my 925 points.
Juliet not sure how to work this ? Thanks for friend requst......
Juliet Thanks .......
Saying hi cause I have no more power and can't leave rep??????
What no pic?
your welcome...take care!
You are just too much fun!!
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