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2 votes
How is the Italian sinner different from the Shakespearean sonnet?

2 Answers

3 votes
The Shakespearean sonnet has the rhyme scheme ABAB CDCD EFEF GG, forming three quatrains (four lines in a group) and a closing couplet (two rhymed lines). ... Wordsworth often used the Petrarchan form, but changed the octave to ABBA ACCA because it is harder to find rhyming words in English than in Italian.
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User Darrol
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2 votes

when you say the italian sinner do you mean someone from italy that is a sinner or were you referring to Αμάρτημα

in greece?

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User IQW
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8.4k points
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