Answer:
The correct answer is: c, a complex sentence
Explanation:
This is an example of a complex sentence. A complex sentence is compounded by two statements, one is the independent clause and the second one is the dependent clause. The first one can be a sentence alone, it does not need another statement to make sense, however the dependent clause cannot be a sentence by itself even though it has a subject and a verb, because it does not have sense by itself, it needs the independent clause to have a meaning
dependent clause: Although he was drafted into the Vietnam War
independent clause: Muhammad Ali refused to fight.
Answer:
figurative language
Explanation:
Figurative language is when you use a word or phrase that does not have its normal everyday, literal meaning. ... There are a few different ways to use figurative language, including metaphors, similes, personification and hyperbole. See the table below for some figurative language examples and definitions
Closest and most correct answer among the choices provided by the question is the first choice "vis"
Answer:
Metaphor is the literary device in which two disconnected/different things are compared. Simile is also a comparison between two disconnected things, but simile uses words such as "like" or "as", while metaphor simple states that "one thing is another".
"The crest of each of these waves was a hill, from the top of which men surveyed, for a moment, a broad tumultuous expanse, shining and wind-riven." - Metaphor.
"As each wave came, and she [the boat] rose for it, she seemed like a horse making at a fence outrageously high." - Simile.
Personification gives human characteristics to objects, animals or ideas.
"If this old fool woman, Fate, cannot do better than this..." - Personification.
Symbolism is when a word is used to symbolize something else. In this example, "uncertainties" represent the waves.
"The open boat is described as 'bobbing along among the universe's uncertainties." - Symbolism.
Explanation:hi