Respuesta :
i want to say
six
but i am not certain but i heavily feel like it is six
Foot
six
but i am not certain but i heavily feel like it is six
Foot
Definition:
No toes, no shoes, no soles. In literary circles, this term refers to the most basic unit of a poem's meter.
A foot is a combination of stressed and unstressed syllables. There are all kinds of feet in poetry, and they all sound different, so we'll give you a handy list. If you want to be the nerdiest nerd in the nerd herd, you should memorize it:
Iamb: daDUMTrochee: DUMdaSpondee: DUMDUMAnapest: dadaDUMDactyl: DUMdadaAmphibrach: daDUMdaPyrrhic: dadaA combination of feet makes up a line of meter. So, for example, the most common meter in English poetry is iambic pentameter, which contains five (that's where that "pent-" comes from) iambs, all in a row.
Finding your feet can be as tricky as learning the Viennese waltz, but that's the main task of scansion, a fancy term for analyzing a poem's meter. Just remember the list above, and read aloud, read read aloud.
It is 6.
Because the poem Iliad that is wrtitten by Homer is made out if six feet.
Here's proof from my lesson ;)
The Iliad has a rhythm created by a rhyme scheme. It is made up of feet. Homer wrote the original text in dactylic hexameter (12 syllables/6 feet)
You're Welcome!)