Answer:
The correct answer is B (to add personification to “his essay”
).
Explanation:
When the author says his essay won first place, he was over the moon, which means his essay was really good, so the author is adding personification to his "essay", BY SAYING it was over the moon. This is personification because his "essay" cannot literally jump over the moon. This is not possible, so by saying his essay was really good, comparing it to his essay was over the moon, the second sentence would be more personified than the first one.
Shakespeare shows the character's point of view by
B. figurative language
Explanation:
The Shakespearean language is some of the richest and the most figurative and thus it is most enduring out of many playwrights.
He deftly uses the themes and the motifs of the world around him to craft a language that is easily understandable and the characters seem motivated by things that audience can understand.
His rich figurative language takes its cues from the characters' emotional state and the environment they are in.
Answer:
Each offers friendship to the other.
Explanation:
Answer:
She recognizes the connection between objects and words.
Explanation:
Helen Keller had already begun forming letters with her fingers, so water was not the first word she wrote.
Helen had broken the doll way before she went to the well. In fact, she forgets the frustration she felt before after she touches the doll and she says she regretted the doll after.
The honeysuckle thing is irrelevant to this question.
Helen could not understand the connection between words and objects because mug and water were essentially the same thing to her. Once she was away from the vessels, the jugs, mugs and saucers, and felt the water in the well gush in between her fingers, Helen understood "water" but more importantly, she understood words.