The lecturer introduces himself as Earshad Banjal from St Jude T. in Kidapawan City. He leads a general education class and asks the students if they are ready to begin the lesson on poetry terms, specifically the tanka poem structure of 31 syllables, elegy poems that lament the dead, and folklore as traditional beliefs of a community spread through oral storytelling.
The lecturer introduces himself as Earshad Banjal from St Jude T. in Kidapawan City. He leads a general education class and asks the students if they are ready to begin the lesson on poetry terms, specifically the tanka poem structure of 31 syllables, elegy poems that lament the dead, and folklore as traditional beliefs of a community spread through oral storytelling.
The lecturer introduces himself as Earshad Banjal from St Jude T. in Kidapawan City. He leads a general education class and asks the students if they are ready to begin the lesson on poetry terms, specifically the tanka poem structure of 31 syllables, elegy poems that lament the dead, and folklore as traditional beliefs of a community spread through oral storytelling.
I am Earshad Banjal I represent St Jude T...., here in Kidapawan City We in the review center always pray for your well-being, safety, and progress.
So are you excited to start our ratio for today?
Say Yes if youre ready! Hmmp. I cant hear you, louderrrr? Okay very good. So get your pen and paper, listen and well start.
The tanka is a thirty-one-syllable poem, traditionally written in a single unbroken
line ELEGY = a poem of serious reflection, usually a lament for the dead FOLKLORE = the traditional beliefs, customs, and stories of a community, passed through the generations by word of mouth.