A
This makes him honorable because he wants to make sure that both him and Grendel have a chance at defeating the other.
The gerund phrase in this sentence is <span>camping near a lake. The gerund itself is camping, but as a phrase, it has additional modifiers (near a lake) that describe it. Gerunds and gerund phrases function as nouns in a sentence. So, in this case, its noun use is predicate nominative (predicate noun), that is a noun that completes the predicate by telling us what the subject is.</span>
<span>contain three pieces of evidence</span><span> is my best guess :) - beanz</span>
Answer:
The given poem uses simile and sensory imagery.
Explanation:
A simile is the use of "as" and "like" in making comparisons between two unlike things but yet connected somehow. This allows for related themes or ideas to be connected to provide a more vivid description.
On the other hand, sensory imagery is the description of things through the medium of the five senses- sight, sound, taste, touch, and smell. This technique engages the reader's mind, giving a vivid sense of imagination and allowing for a more connected sense of understanding the text.
In the poem "Simile" by N. Scott Momaday, the figurative language and imagery used are that of a simile and sensory imagery. The <u>simile is seen in the comparison of "we" to a "deer", in the line "we are as the deer"</u>.
And sensory imagery is seen in the lines
<em>"who walk in single file
</em>
<em>with heads high
</em>
<em>with ears forward
</em>
<em>with eyes watchful
</em>
<em>with hooves always placed on firm ground
</em>
<em>in whose limbs there is latent flight"</em>
Throughout <u>lines 3 to 8, we find visual, sensory, and kinetic imagery</u>.