Making it possible or likely
The third option uses the word snake in a positive and figurative way.
The figurative element present in the sentence is a simile. In a simile, a person is compared to something else usually using the word "like". In the sentence, "like" is used to compare a woman to a snake.
Moreover, the sentence is positive because it states that the woman was like a snake but "fortunately did not enjoy eating live mice". The person is pointing out the positive aspect of snakes' quickness the woman had and the narrator clarifies that a negative aspect of snakes such as eating mice is not a personality trait the woman had.
Answer:
Its a Nutrition Label
Explanation:
I sent this to the wrong question my bad, I am very sorry.
Example: you were talking about rocks and petrified trees, rocks are made out of minerals, but petrified trees are taken over by minerals.
Answer: Just to save you time here!
Explanation: College Composition and Communication publishes research and scholarship in rhetoric and composition studies that supports college teachers in reflecting on and improving their practices in teaching writing and that reflects the most current scholarship and theory in the field. The field of composition studies draws on research and theories from a broad range of humanistic disciplines—English studies, rhetoric, cultural studies, LGBT studies, gender studies, critical theory, education, technology studies, race studies, communication, philosophy of language, anthropology, sociology, and others—and from within composition and rhetoric studies, where a number of subfields have also developed, such as technical communication, computers and composition, writing across the curriculum, research practices, and the history of these fields.