Answer:
A) epic simile
Explanation:
An epic simile is a figurative language that compares one element to another (thing, animal or person) while employing the words "as" or "like" and that is developed over several lines of verse. Its aim is to make the writing more colorful and interesting and serve as decoration.
The passage is an example of epic simile because it describes Athena through several verse lines by comparing it to "a bird in soaring flight", and employing a simile because it uses the word "like" to compare.
1 girl
2boy
3boy
4girl
5both
6both
7boy
8both
9girl
10boy
I am in karachi, because Karachi is a city and you can't be "at" a city. Saying I'm at only works if it a place such as a grocery store or a mall, but does not apply to cities or countries.
Answer:
1. Quirrell tells Harry he is the one who tried to kill him.
2. He tells Harry professor Snape was actually trying to save Harry.
3. He tells Harry he is the one who let the troll in during Halloween.
Explanation:
In J. K. Rowling's "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone", the main character Harry Potter is famous in the world of wizards and witches. When he was just a baby, the infamous Lord Voldemort, an evil wizard, tried to kill him, but Harry survived.
Now, Harry is 11 years old and attending his first year at Hogwarts, the magic school. <u>He thinks professor Snape, who clearly hates Harry, is trying to kill him and also trying to obtain the philosopher's stone. To Harry's astonishment, it is professor Quirrell who is doing all that. Quirrell seems shy and weak, but he is serving Lord Voldemort. He casts a spell to try and kill Harry during a Quidditch match, but Snapes casts a countercurse to save him. Quirrell also let a troll into the castle to distract everyone during Halloween while he went searching for the stone but, once again, Snape went after him. Quirrell tells Harry those things while they are in the last chamber, searching for the stone.</u>