Answer: D) The imagery underscores Mr. Shiftlet's restlessness and his reluctance to remain in one place.
Explanation: Imagery is a literary device that consists in the use of figurative language or detailed descriptions in order to evoke the senses of the reader and to create a mental picture. In the given excerpt from "The life you save may be your own", Mr. Shiftlet uses imagery when comparing his body to a house (because he couldn't move) and his spirit to an automobile, which is always moving, this demonstrates the fact that despite his condition, he refuses to remain in one place.
I believe it should be A., since there are no emotions evolved in the description of Huck's Father, you can cross out C definitely, and it doesn't seem to foreshadow anything, but it is very descriptive and vivid, so the reader can picture the man in their mind, objective being based on looks without knowing the personality.
The answer is gonna be ( B )
The Civil War is sometimes called “The Boys’ War,” because so many soldiers who fought in it were still in their teens. The rule in the Union Army was that soldiers had to be 18 to join, but many younger boys answered “I’m over 18, sir,” when the recruiter asked.
Many of the youngest boys served as drummers; they weren’t supposed to be fighters, but they did a very important job during the Civil War. You’ve probably seen pictures of a boy walking beside the marching soldiers, beating his drum to keep them together. But this wasn’t the drummer’s most important — or most difficult — job.
In the noise and confusion of battle, it was often impossible to hear the officers’ orders, so each order was given a series of drumbeats to represent it. Both soldiers and drummers had to learn which drumroll meant “meet here” and which meant “attack now” and which meant “retreat” and all the other commands of battlefield and camp. (The most exciting drum call was “the long roll,” which was the signal to attack. The drummer would just beat-beat-beat — and every other drummer in hearing distance would beat-beat-beat — until all that could be heard was an overwhelming thunder pushing the army forward.)
Forced rhyme is , "near-rhyme" meaning that such rhyme is dull and unimaginative, knack, wooden, stiff.
(Forced rhyme tends to make use of other rhyming devices like assonance and consonance, so it overlaps in many cases with the definition slant rhyme, but forced rhyme is a much broader and loosely-defined term that can be used to apply to any type of near-rhyme in the final syllables of a word)