Answer:
a confrontation between the protagonist and antagonist.
Explanation:
what usually happens during a climaxofastory
<span>Theodore Roosevelt, 26th
President of the United States, was one of the most important
and effective environmental leaders in American history. Beginning in the 1880s and
culminating with his Presidency (1901-1909), his leadership of the emerging American
conservation movement was instrumental in preserving hundreds of millions of acres of natural
and historic treasures, including forests, wetlands, endangered species, native ruins, and “natural
wonders” like the Grand Canyon</span>
The answer would be "She felt like a popsicle left in a freezer long enough to be shriveled" because it uses the word "like" which indicates that this sentence is a simile, and similies are a form of Figurative Language.
What is the central irony used to support the satire in the passage? The king prefers a pretentious son to his more sensible siblings. The king finds great value in a son who has little sense. The king is unable to see that Shadwell is really a poor choice. The king believes that maturity will build more sense in his son. Done Mac Flecknoe by John Dryden (excerpt) All humane things are subiect to decay, And when Fate Summons, Monarch's must obey; This Flecknoe found, who like Augustus young, Was call'd to Empire, and had Govern'd long; In Prose and Ver
I couldn’t search it up and describe your question a little more