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    reasons for those additions. The Book of Hymns is one prime example of a prosulae. Plainchant was being sung day in and day out by the monks‚ who had already added some slight melody‚ but was still not easy to memorize. By adding some rhythm and separation in syllables throughout the melody‚ a new way to not only memorize the verses‚ but also present them‚ was born. In the early Middle Ages‚ melodic or textual embellishments added to plainchant were referred to as prosulae. In your own words‚ summarize

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    Lesson One: Differentiating between /r/ and /l/ Target group: This lesson targets students learning English who speak Chinese‚ Japanese‚ and Korean as a native language. Additionally‚ this lesson probably works best as a remedial response to observed difficulties in perception or production of these sounds. Time: 50 minutes 1. Introduction: This section involves introducing the sounds to the students using learner friendly explanations. In this section‚ I will also model the sounds

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    bruce dawe consumerism

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    Consumerism as we understand as individuals is the need to acquire objects and possessions often beyond our essential needs‚ just for the sake of acquiring them. This universal theme is made patent through two of Dawes poems‚ Americanized and Televistas 1977. Dawe is successful as he discusses and ultimately utilizes the theme of consumerism in a negative‚ derogatory way. Additionally‚ Dawes employment of techniques such as metaphors‚ rhetorical questions‚ repetition‚ figurative language and tone

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    Wasp's Nest

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    so through sympathizing with both the speaker and the wasps‚ the reader learns to appreciate the time and devotion that even a wasp puts in into making a home. The poem is structured as free verse with no apparent rhyme scheme but it does have a rhythm. The “two aerial tigers” resonated “savagely a-hum” as they

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    Lady Sings the Blues

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    LADY SINGS THE BLUES What is a song but a poem set to music? Take away the music from a good song and the rhythm of the words will create its own musical sound. "Songs For a Colored Singer"‚ a poem written by Elizabeth Bishop‚ is a song without the music. Bishop’s use of repetitive rhymes creates the lyrical‚ song like‚ structure to her poem. The voice of the song belongs to a black woman who encounters adversity throughout the poem. The sum of the elements‚ a black woman singing about hard times

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    Dulce Et Decorum Est

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    * A Detailed Study of “Dulce Et Decorum Est” by Wilfred Owen * * * In the poem “Dulce et Decorum Est” by Wilfred Owen‚ we see how the author presents powerful messages using irony with the translated title meaning sweet and fitting to describe the horrors of war. This‚ poem in particular‚ highlights the horrors of such a situation through the life of a soldier. In the poem‚ we are presented with the setting of a battlefield where the author uses metaphors and similes to describe the

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    1

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    Topics: 1. PHONETICS AS A BRANCH OF LINGUISTICS We begin our study of language by examining the inventory‚ structure and functions of the speech sounds. This branch of linguistics is called phonetics. Phonetics (pronounced /fəˈnɛtɪks/‚ from the Greek: φωνή‚ phōnē‚ ’sound‚ voice’) is a branch of linguistics that comprises the study of the sounds of human speech‚ or—in the case of sign languages—the equivalent aspects of sign.[1] It is concerned with the physical properties of speech sounds or signs

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    Intonation in English

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    Introduction I have chosen the theme “Intonation” because it is one of the most interesting things of the speech and it is very important to acquire the proper intonation. The aim of my speech is to tell what the speech melody is and how is it connected with sentence stress and how they influence each other. Intonation is magic. It can say more than even words. Intonation can tell you about the mood and the character of the person. Each person has his own intonation. That is why already at the first

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    Music Theory

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    praise to the Blessed Virgin Mary and hymns were the form of this Christian chant. However‚ the form of O viridissima virga did not fit the traditional hymn pattern. Instead of having a regular number of lines and syllables per line‚ none had a regular number of lines per stanza or syllables per line. In spite of this‚ the chant was apparently strophic with successive verses all beginning with melodic phrases. In all‚ the form of O Viridissima Virga was relatively vague compared to other hymns of the

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    Quiz and Notes on Poetry

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    Poetry A Soldier By Robert Frost He is that fallen lance that lies as hurled‚ That lies unlifted now‚ come dew‚ come rust‚ But still lies pointed as it plowed the dust. If we who sight along it round the world‚ See nothing worthy to have been its mark‚ It is because like men we look too near‚ Forgetting that as fitted to the sphere‚ Our missiles always make too short an arc. They fall‚ they rip the grass‚ they intersect The curve of earth‚ and striking‚ break their own; They make us

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