Asked by keisha

vvHymns most often featured four-line strophes in which the lines were generally the same length and often rhymed.

Option A
True

Option B
False

Question 50
Question 50
1
Point
Question 50
During the Middle Ages, sacred and secular worlds were

Option A
Separate

Option B
Integrated

Option C
Both separate and integrated

Option D
Equal

Question 51
Question 51
1
Point
Question 51
The earliest music of Catholic Christianity was chant.

Option A
True

Option B
False

Question 52
Question 52
1
Point
Question 52
Catholic Masses were always performed in English.

Option A
True

Option B
False

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
1) Hymns most often featured four-line strophes...
Answer: A True
Brief: Early Western hymns (e.g., Ambrosian/Gregorian tradition) commonly used strophic quatrains with regular line length; rhyme became more common over time.

2) During the Middle Ages, sacred and secular worlds were
Answer: B Integrated
Brief: Church life pervaded social, political, and cultural institutions, so sacred and secular realms were closely intertwined.

3) The earliest music of Catholic Christianity was chant.
Answer: A True
Brief: The earliest surviving liturgical music is monophonic chant (e.g., Gregorian chant).

4) Catholic Masses were always performed in English.
Answer: B False
Brief: The Mass was traditionally in Latin until widespread changes after the Second Vatican Council.