Tone, as you may know, is the general attitude an author takes in the construction of a story, essay, poem, etc. that can be determined by the author's choice of words. When we look at the essay, "Murmurs," by K.C. Cole, we see slang/informality in the author's word choice in the following sentence from the essay: "Because there's scientific gold in them there sinusoidal
hills." Additionally, there are many analogies and similes the author uses in the explanation of concepts such as when the author writes "Like children going after cookies the patterns of sloshing particles left their sticky fingerprints all over the sky." As such, one way to describe the author's tone would be informal (almost playful/humorous) yet informative.
What does this even mean you not even asking a question
Answer: When I think of poetry sounds and rhyming comes to mind I think the people making poetry are using figurative language to convey a message. I also think of song lyrics poetry is kinda like song lyrics
Best answer is
A) I met Cathy at a store on a street near the bridge.
Although every option features concrete language, this can be considered the most concrete sentence. Concrete language, the opposite of abstract language, features little to no ambiguity in meaning, and is specific in its description. The less imagination you need to fully interpret the sentence, the more concrete it is.