bamozer152
13.12.2019 •
English
Which is true about the rhyme scheme of "analysis of baseball"?
a. the rhymes are predictable and measured.
b. the rhyming words are often very close together.
c. the rhymes occur regularly at the end of each line.
d. the rhymes follow a traditional poetic form.
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For other uses, see Devil (disambiguation).
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This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page.
A devil is the personification of evil as it is conceived in many and various cultures and religious traditions.[1] It is seen as the objectification of a hostile and destructive force.[2]
Statue of the devil in the Žmuidzinavičius Museum or Devil's Museum in Kaunas, Lithuania.
Satan (the dragon; on the left) gives to the beast of the sea (on the right) power represented by a sceptre in a detail of panel III.40 of the medieval French Apocalypse Tapestry, produced between 1377 and 1382.
A fresco detail from the Rila Monastery, in which demons are depicted as having grotesque faces and bodies.
It is difficult to specify a particular definition of any complexity that will cover all of the traditions, beyond that it is a manifestation of evil. It is meaningful to consider the devil through the lens of each of the cultures and religions that have the devil as part of their mythos.[3]
The history of this concept intertwines with theology, mythology, psychiatry, art and literature, maintaining a validity, and developing independently within each of the traditions.[4] It occurs historically in many contexts and cultures, and is given many different names—Satan, Lucifer, Beelzebub, Mephistopheles, Al-Shaytan—and attributes: It is portrayed as blue, black, or red; it is portrayed as having horns on its head, and without horns, and so on.[5][6] The idea of the devil has been taken seriously often, but not always, for example when devil figures are used in advertising and on candy wrappers.[3][7]
Devil-like figure in Quran and Islamic tradition
Shaitan
A demon or devil in Islam
Prince of Darkness (Manichaeism)
Figure in Manichaean cosmology
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