This passage from Nectar in a Sieve uses both personification and a simile. A simile is a comparison made between two things using the word 'like' or 'as'. In the excerpt, fear is compared to "black flying ants after a storm" using the word 'like'. Personification is when an inanimate object is given human like qualities, such as breathing, feeling, talking, etc. This is also present in the passage because the narrator has transformed fear into a tangible object by comparing it to the black flying ants. Both personification and similes are forms of figurative language, and both can have powerful affects on the way the audience views the story.
The answer to the question is A. It wants me to write a long sentence even tho I don’t want to so I will repeat myself and say it is A
Answer:
The poem creates suspense by showing several scars on the fish, in addition to showing that the gills and jaws were severely damaged by hooks, which created a suspense about everything that fish lodged. Because of this, the speaker of the poem decides to release the fish.
Explanation:
In the poem we are introduced by a speaker who caught a large fish. However, this fish had a peculiar appearance, its body had several defects and as the speaker describes these defects, there is a suspense in the growing poem about what experiences this fish went through. The speaker then realizes that these defects were proven by hooks, so the speaker concludes that the scars and defects of the fish are medals of the victories he won to survive, for this reason, the speaker decides to release the fish and let it go away.
Answer:
Equal distribution of fair rights to all.
Explanation: