This is a little bit tricky to justify without context, but I would say that this is an example of characterization. Through this sentence, the reader isn’t directly being told something about the character or her personality, but her sleeping with the letter under her cheek can help the reader make inferences about how, for instance, she treats things that are important to her.
Answer: B. Waterway
Explanation: All of the other choices are different kinds of waterways, but a waterway isn’t a river, a canal, or a lake.
Answer:
“Lourdes knows. She understands, as only a mother can, the terror she is about to inflict, the ache Enrique will feel and finally the emptiness”(Nazario 1). When Enrique was only five years old, his mother Lourdes made the decision to leave her children and go north to the United States. There in the United States she hopes to find work and support her struggling family back in Honduras. In Enrique’s Journey by Sonia Nazario; a literacy non-fiction, Enrique at the age of 16 goes on a long journey from Honduras to try and find his mother Lourdes with nothing but her phone number, he is still heartbroken from her departure 11 years ago. In Antoine De Saint-Exupèry’s work of fiction titled the Little Prince; an allegory:, a pilot crashes in the Saharan desert, and meets a little boy who claims to be the prince of his planet on asteroid 325 or known by humans as B-612. While in the desert the little prince tells the pilot, his new friend, of his interactions with other various types of people around his neighboring planets. Enrique and the Pilot both learn about responsibility and what it takes to survive.
Answer:
The book: Wealthy teen nearly experiences consequences uses humor and satire by analyzing the case of Charles Wentworth, a boy who killed four people in a drunken haze, and by using diction to emphasize criticism in our society.
Explanation:
This book is the analysis of a case in which a teenager with a position of wealth and influence executes a series of murders and employs stylistic devices to develop the criticism of our society. Making a hypothetical and rhetorical point of view that helps the reader the point of view of the writer. An example is when the author starts to contrast the privileged position the analyzed character had and his acts.
Look at these three sentences:
• She flew past me on her bicycle.
• Turing was the father of the modern computer.
• He gave me a cold look.
In all these sentences, the word in bold type is not used in its basic or literal meaning – it is used in a metaphorical way.
A metaphor is a type of comparison: when you use a word or phrase metaphorically, you are using a meaning that has developed from the literal meaning and has some of the same features. For example, if you say someone ‘flies past’ on a bicycle or in a car, they are not really flying through the air, but the speed of their movement reminds you of a plane or a bird. This is a normal part of the way word meanings develop, and when a word has several meanings, some of those meanings are usually metaphorical.
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