Personification
"<em>it must have run there when it was a young house, playing at hide-and-seek with other houses</em>" - Charles Dickens - A Christmas Carol
HYPERBOLE
<em>"Napoleon is always right" </em>- George Orwell - Animal farm
METAPHOR
<em>"The city reeked of crime" </em>- Dickens - Christmas Carol
SIMILE
<em>"As dead as a doornail" - </em>Dickens - Christmas carol
B. They follow a design to cut away the top layer of fabric, revealing the next
Answer:
Sheila, Anna's mum.
Explanation:
Saving Anna's family is a story by Readworks, which has a main character called Anna, a good nature girl, who struggled with a terrible illness, cancer. Her health condition deteriorated to the extent that her mother, Sheila, had to resign from work to take care of her daughter.
Her decision drastically reduced the family's earning compared to the period before Anna's cancer was diagnosed, causing a worse financial condition in the family.
Anna's good friend, Christine realized that Anna's family needs financial help but they do not want to complain, so she and her friends organised a party to raise funds for Anna's family for them to survive.
Answer:
Background knowledge
Explanation:
Well, when it comes to teaching reading comprehension strategies, it's the glue that holds all the comprehension strategies together. Schema is your background knowledge; it's what you already know before you even pick up the book. ... Your schema, or background knowledge, is highly fueled by your interests. Hope this helps ^v^
It is thanks to his jealousy that the Frog becomes the sole singer at the end of the poem.
He envied the Nightingale's talent and therefore tricked the Nightingale into practicing so much it died. After the Nightingale's death, the Frog became the only (and therefore best) singer. The Frog's success was only possible due to his jealousy. If he had not been jealous of the Nightingale, the Frog would not have become the singer he became.