Asked by Justine
Which of the following do Petrarchan and Shakespearean sonnets have in common?
A. rhyme scheme
B. length
C. question and answer format
D. Both are organized as an octet and a sestet
I chose A. rhyme scheme. Am I Correct?
A. rhyme scheme
B. length
C. question and answer format
D. Both are organized as an octet and a sestet
I chose A. rhyme scheme. Am I Correct?
Answers
Answered by
Reed
I don't think so.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petrarch%27s_and_Shakespeare%27s_sonnets
Your text may have other ideas. What does it say?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petrarch%27s_and_Shakespeare%27s_sonnets
Your text may have other ideas. What does it say?
Answered by
Alana
I think its d.
Answered by
Reed
No, it's not d.
Answered by
Susan
Just looked it up and its A.
Answered by
Writeacher
Susan is incorrect. Re-read what Reed posted -- pay attention to details. Do those rhyme schemes look identical?
Answered by
Justine
Its C but thank you for helping! I just read in my textbook that Petrarchan sonnets has two parts, an eight-line section, called octave, followed by a six line section, called the sestet. This form makes the Italian sonnet perfectly suited for a two-part statement: question-answer, problem solution, or theme-comment. It shows an example of each sonnet in my book. Petrarch goes by the rhyme scheme abbaabba etc. while Shakespeare goes by abab cdcd. Also Petrarch goes by octave, volta, and sestet, which Shakespeare goes by first quatrain, second quatrain, third quatrain, and couplet.
Answered by
Writeacher
Aha! The textbook! What a novel idea!!
I'm glad you found your answer.
I'm glad you found your answer.
Answered by
Justine
Thank you for your help! You guys helped me narrow it down. The textbook was confusing me because like Susan, I also thought it was the rhyme scheme at first until I really looked at it!
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