The r sound in "liquor, power, generate, therein, sire and flower" and bud/sun/run is an example of consonance.
Option C and D
<u>Explanation: </u>
Consonance is known as repetitive sounds by constants. In the above answer both the option are consonance since they have repetitive sounds in closely connected words. Sometimes it may be middle of a word but mostly it occurs at the end of the word.
It is mostly used in a sentence or phrase. It is also known as a Literary Device Consonance can be identified by identical constant sounds of the words in the sentence or phrase. The 'r' sound in first statement and 'u' sound in second is the best example among given option for consonance.
Actually, I think it is the one where the audience knows he will fail.
Dramatic Irony is when the audience knows something the reader does not.
<em>"John Redding Goes to Sea" </em>is a short story written by the American author Zora Neale Hurston and published in 1921. In the story, the protagonist John Redding is an ambitious dreamer who wants to leave his hometown to explore the unknown but many events stop him to fulfill his dream.
The statement that best supports the idea that the author was an independent woman who longed to escap her small hometown is the following:
<em> "Pa, when ah gets as big as you Ah'm goin' farther than them ships. Ah'm goin' to where the sky touches the ground."</em>
I think you forgot to write your question...