B. direct comparison.
A is for a simile, C is for a personification
Answer:
compound complex sentence
Explanation:
the answer should be compound complex sentence
The correct answer to this open question s the following.
Although there are no options attached, we can say the following.
Martin Luther King III set important goals. His goals were the same as those of his parents, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Coretta Scott King in that he stills wants to be an African American civil rights activist who fights for minorities in America.
The goals are different in that Martin Luther King III did not mobilize people to take the streets as his father did or organized the massive events of the civil rights movement in the 1950s-the 1960s because these are different times with different contexts and legislation that had permitted a different atmosphere compared with what Martin Luther King Jr. lived in the 1960s.
Notwithstanding the different ties and circumstances, racial issues in America still persists. King III was the President of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (1997-2004), where he tried to continue the legacy of his father.
Answer:
are still loaded with meaning.
Explanation:
Hemingway's simple sentences are very meaningful. They clearly show the characters' opinions on a major theme of war. Passini tries to prove that war is the worst thing that can happen to people. The narrator does not agree because to him, defeat is worse as it means losing 'your home, your family'.
Although the characters express their ideas in short sentences, they convey their message in a powerful way and sound convincing to the reader because both Passini and the narrator make convincing arguments. Indeed, Hemingway's seemingly simple prose is loaded with meaning.
To a certain extent, parallelism helps to reinforce the message of these short sentences:
"They come after you. They take your home. They take your sisters." That's parallelism at its best.
Responding to this, Passini also uses repetition of words and structures: "Let everybody defend his home. Let them keep their sisters in the house.”
All these examples show how 'little' words can make a big difference.