Im 99% sure that it is metaphor
Explanation:
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Reducing the Impact of Negative Stereotypes on the Careers of Minority and Women Scientists
By Daisy GrewalNov. 26, 2010 , 10:00 AM

Social science research powerfully demonstrates how stereotypes, even those that people are not consciously aware of, can influence the careers of women and minorities. For example, people rate the quality of a scientific paper differently depending on whether they think a man or a woman wrote it. Stereotypes also reduce the self-esteem, motivation, and intellectual performance of women and minorities through a process called stereotype threat. Stereotype threat reduces performance in situations where an individual might confirm a negative stereotype about his or her group. In one example, researchers found that African-American college students performed worse on an SAT test when the students had been told that the test is a valid measure of intelligence.
Answer:
<em>Near the entrance to the exhibit, the first thing I saw was a giant grasshopper.</em>
Prepositional phrases can be described as phrases which function as either adjective phrases or adverb phrases to modify other words in a sentence. Hence, a prepositional phrase can be an adjective or an adverb.
Common prepositional phrase examples include about, after, at, before, behind, by, during, for, from, in, of, over, past, to, under, up, and with.
This has the rhyme scheme of a hybrid sonnet, with the rhymes following:
abba abba cdcd ee
The first two stanzas follow the same rhyme pattern-abba abba-with the end words:
skies/face/place/tries
eyes/case/grace/decsries
Then the next quatrain begins a new, more Shakespearean format-cdcd-with the end words:
me/wit/be/yet
Finally, the rhyming couplet at the end finishes the sonnet with 'ee':
posesse/ungratefulnesse