The correct answers are
Metaphor: She's an encyclopedia; We're just old news; I'm spreading my wings.
Simile: It's hard as steel; He's crafty like a fox; I'm strong like a bull
Explanation:
Both Simile and Metaphor are rhetorical figures used to describe a person, animal, object, etc. by making a comparison. The key difference between these two figures is that in SImile explicit comparison words such as "like" or "as" are used, while in metaphor the comparison occurs directly. This means, in the sentences "It's hard as steel", "He's crafty like a fox" and " I'm strong like a bull" there is simile due to the use of like and as, while in the rest of the options there is a metaphor because comparison occurs directly.
Answer:
The new Jason movie left everyone in the theater aghast.
The donations for the local food drive were ample.
I thought I had seen an apparition of my Great-Grandfather.
The male wolf had to assert his dominance.
The school bully made everyone cower as he walked the halls.
Explanation:
Get an answer for 'How does the narrator's attitude change towards the raven as "The The Raven makes the speaker remember his lost Lenore, whom he had hoped to Man doth not yield him to theangels, nor unto death utterly, save only.
The correct answer is: To establish your qualifications for speaking quuzlet.
Explicitly introducing one's qualifications to do anything at the start of a speech is not a common practice. If it happened, it would be done by someone else before the speaker steps on stage and the speech begins. Althought it may seem as an arrogant practice, a speaker may express their qualifications once having introduced themselves and the arguments to be presented.
If i were the district of Attorney, i would need for example the daughter´s fingerprints in some surface where the money was stolen, a video that catches her stealing, a witness that expresses that has seen her taking the money, a big acquisition of something material that needs a considerable amount of money to get it.