The correct answer of the given question above would be option B. END RHYME. The stylistic or literary device that the author uses in the given lines above is called the END RHYME. The words that rhyme in the given lines are "long" and "wrong", and "dead" and "said". Hope this answer helps.
<span>it is where this many females as there are males and it is a good way though
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my cricket the name of Bella<span>
Example:
In the given
statement, "The Caribbean sea is a great location for deep-sea fishing."
The phrase "a great location for deep-sea fishing" is the adjective
phrase of the sentence.
Phrases are group of words that doesn't
have a complete thought unlike clauses that can stand alone since it has
a subject and predicate whereas a phrase doesn't.
An adjective phrase is one type of phrase to describe a noun or pronoun subject in a sentence.</span>
Answer: The sentences that include only prepositional phrases are "There was no one visible; under him, in the water, the dim shapes of the swimmers had disappeared" and "He could see nothing through the stinging salt water but the blank rock".
Explanation:<u> </u><u>A prepositional phrase is a group of words introduced by a preposition</u>. Generally, a prepositional phrase also includes a noun or a pronoun. The sentence "There was no one visible; under him, in the water, the dim shapes of the swimmers had disappeared" <u>contains two prepositional phrases: "under him" and "in the water"</u>, which have been introduced by "under" and "in" respectively. Furthermore, in the sentence "He could see nothing through the stinging salt water but the blank rock", <u>"through the stinging salt" is a prepositional phrase since it begins with the preposition "through"</u>.