B. More basketball players wear Slam Dunk shoes than any other brand.
Something that is implied is not directly stated. This means that you need to "read between the lines" or assume what the speaker wants you to do. For the rest of the options the call to action is directly stated. In A, the call to action is to vote for Rodrigo Noriega. In C, the call to action is to buy Great Grain goods. In D the call to action is to go to the auto show. In option B the speaker wants you to buy Slam Dunk shoes. However, he doesn't just tell you to do it. Instead, the speaker lets you know that they are the shoes most basketball players wear. The thinking is that if you're looking for basketball shoes, you'd want the ones that everyone else gets, because they are most likely the best.
Caesar is the character says, “Thrice hath Calpurnia in her sleep cried out 'Help, oh, they murder Caesar
<h3>What is the
act of II of Julius?</h3>
In Act II, Scene 2, Julius Caesar utters these remarks. Julius Caesar is At this moment whining about his night. He claims that Calpurnia shouted this out while she slept and that both Heaven and Earth were boisterous.
When Calpurnia enters, she immediately expresses how anxious she is about the day. She tries to persuade Caesar to stay in, but despite the ominous omens, he chooses to go about his day nonetheless.
Thus, option C is correct.
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The simile can be seen in the sentence “Only today I wish I didn’t have just eleven years rattling inside me like pennies in a tin Band-Aid box.”
The metaphor, in turn, can be seen in the sentence “I can't stop the little animal noises from coming out of me….”
<h3>What are simile and metaphor?</h3>
- They are figures of speech.
- They are figures of speech that allow comparisons to be made.
- The simile is an explicit comparison made with the words "as" or "like."
- The metaphor is an implicit comparison and is made subjectively, requiring the reader's interpretation.
In the simile presented in Cisneros' "Eleven", we can see how the narrator compares the eleven years old with the coins in a safe. This comparison reinforces the idea that a person's age is the sum of all their previous ages. This shows the reader that the narrator is aware of her personality construction and the formation of who she should be over the years.
The metaphor, in turn, compares the girl's cry with the sound of animals. This shows how desperately, wildly, gutturally she cried, like a small child.
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A no he gets over it but for a different