Chaucer's General Prologue follows a rhyme scheme and meter called iambic pentameter. This form dictates the order and structure of the lines, with each line consisting of five pairs of syllables. The specific arrangement of words in each line is influenced by the need to maintain this rhyme scheme and stressed syllable pattern.
The prologue to the book was interesting. In the sentence, prologue refers to the acknowledgements that proceed the beginning of the story.
No it is not. Pro is a prefix mean before or beginning, and logue is a latin root word meaning thought or word. Making the meaning of prologue a beginning thought.
This exciting prologue is making me want to read the whole book, as soon as possible!
start, commence, prologue come to mind.
Part Of A Narrative :) <3
But al be that he was a philosophre, Yet hadde he but litel gold in cofre. -Chaucer, Geoffrey Canterbury Tales,'General Prologue', l.298^9.
You are almost certainly looking for "star-crossed" That's got eleven letters. And it is also in the prologue.
Well, I'm not sure that there is an exact antonym. Epilogue is close though. An epilogue comes at the end of a book, like the prologue comes at the beginning.
no one..it was the prologue it wasn't in the prologue. the prince said it after the servants fought.
Chiara Polo has written: 'Word order between morphology and syntax' -- subject(s): Comparative and general Grammar, Grammar, Comparative and general, Morphology, Syntax, Word order
A speech at the beginning of a play is called a prologue.
The prologue of this book is misleading, it doesn't introduce the book accurately.