Answer:
Gamin:
A boy who hangs around on the streets (street urchin).
A. black as the night, because when you use as to describe something relating to something else then it is a simile
Answer:
The word maleficent means causing harm especially by supernatural means, and we can determine this because the root 'mal' means evil as stated, and maleficent is a term used for evil occurences (specifically in movies and stuff)
Explanation:
So you can determine that the adjective describes something evil or bad because of the use of the root :) Sorry if this isn't specific enough, but it's quite straight forward to me at least so I don't know how to elaborate if you need a more formal answer
Correct me if I’m wrong but I don’t think so. Mysterious and scary are both adjectives so it should’ve gone: The book was mysterious, scary, and humorous. Then, (I think) that sentence would’ve been a parallel structure.
<u>Disease</u>- something infectious or infected (<em>diseased</em>). It does not work properly. Not functioning, sick.
<u>Roots</u>
It comes from the Old French language.
It was originally spelled desaise.