HOW MANY SYLLABLES ARE THERE IN EACH LINE OF THIS POEM THE ROAD NOT TAKEN WRITTEN BY ROBERT FROST
5 answers
rushil, a syllable is the number of parts a word is broken into. "word" is a one syllable word. "broken" is a two syllable word- bro-ken. Rushil is also two syllable. Ru-shil. Computer is three syllable, com-pute-r. Tap out the syllable as you read the lines in the poem. this will give you the answer you want. Hint- each line has the same number of syllables.
I suggest you read the poem and count them.
http://www.wsu.edu:8001/~wldciv/world_civ_reader/world_civ_reader_2/frost_road.html
Different lines have different numbers of syllables, but there is not a large difference between them.
<<Two roads di-verged in a yel-low wood,
And sor-ry I could not tra-vel both>>
(There are 9 syllables in those two lines)
<<In leaves no step had trod-den black>
That one has eight syllables
If you post aqain here, please do it once only per question, and do NOT use all capital letters. It is considered rude by most teachers. Also, learn to spell "poetry".
We could not answer your question until you told us the name of the poem. There is much varation of structure from one poem to another. Some have no structure at all.
http://www.wsu.edu:8001/~wldciv/world_civ_reader/world_civ_reader_2/frost_road.html
Different lines have different numbers of syllables, but there is not a large difference between them.
<<Two roads di-verged in a yel-low wood,
And sor-ry I could not tra-vel both>>
(There are 9 syllables in those two lines)
<<In leaves no step had trod-den black>
That one has eight syllables
If you post aqain here, please do it once only per question, and do NOT use all capital letters. It is considered rude by most teachers. Also, learn to spell "poetry".
We could not answer your question until you told us the name of the poem. There is much varation of structure from one poem to another. Some have no structure at all.
Harold and DrWLS are right.
If you need further help understanding how to determine the syllables in a word and then in a line of poetry, here are some good webpages that will help:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meter_%28poetry%29
Click on 1.1 Feet -- the chart there is very helpful.
http://www.angelfire.com/ct2/evenski/poetry/rhythm.html
The number of syllables in each line of poetry and the order in which they are arranged are shown here.
Remember -- reading poetry aloud and tapping your fingers or toes to the beat will help you figure this out.
If you need further help understanding how to determine the syllables in a word and then in a line of poetry, here are some good webpages that will help:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meter_%28poetry%29
Click on 1.1 Feet -- the chart there is very helpful.
http://www.angelfire.com/ct2/evenski/poetry/rhythm.html
The number of syllables in each line of poetry and the order in which they are arranged are shown here.
Remember -- reading poetry aloud and tapping your fingers or toes to the beat will help you figure this out.
Thank You for not telling the answers
I do not care