Answered

Explore Westonci.ca, the leading Q&A site where experts provide accurate and helpful answers to all your questions. Connect with professionals ready to provide precise answers to your questions on our comprehensive Q&A platform. Get quick and reliable solutions to your questions from a community of experienced experts on our platform.

Is the following line of verse composed of iambs or trochees?
Double, double, toil and trouble.
(Shakespeare, Macbeth)
A. lambs
B. Trochees


Sagot :

Final answer:

The line 'Double, double, toil and trouble' from Shakespeare's Macbeth consists of trochees, not iambs.


Explanation:

The line 'Double, double, toil and trouble' from Shakespeare's Macbeth is composed of trochees. Trochees are two-syllable feet with a pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables (boom-ba), differing from iambs, which have an unstressed followed by a stressed syllable (ba-boom).


Learn more about Poetic Meter here:

https://brainly.com/question/20054100