“Don’t play with the fire,” Mother said to the child.
Answer:
The main difference between past simple and past continuous tense is that:
- we use<u> past simple tense</u> when something happened at some time in past. We also commonly use this tense with past time adverbs (yesterday, last night, two days ago, etc.)
For example: John called his friend yesterday.
- we use <u>past continuous tense</u> if an action occurred in the past and <u>lasted for a period of time.</u>
Example: I was reading a book all day yesterday.
We used past continuous tense because the action of reading lasted for some time (a whole day in this case).
The sentences that contain a metaphor are:
A. Mona was upset that her hair was such a bird's nest, and she couldn't get the knots.
D. The police officer walked around like a king at the crime scene.
<h3>What is a metaphor?</h3>
A metaphor is a word or phrase that is used to indicate any object. In the first sentence, hair like a bird's nest means hair is very dry.
In the second sentence, police man walking like a king is a metaphor, which means walking fearlessly or without any hesitation.
Thus, the correct options are A and D.
Learn more about metaphor
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#SPJ1
1 telling
2 to see
3 to take
4 smoking
5 going
6 to interrupt
7 having
8 (I think you had a typo and it should say stay?) to stay
9 to go
10 being
<span>C.
to make the people of London suffer</span>