Repetition
"plainy, succinctly, without comment" are all words that cna describe minimal
"have ..." construction used repeatedly in the last few lines, "have terrified, have tortturend"
tell me if this is right
I think it is considering your audience and purpose <span />
Answer: A- First person
Explanation: This might be late, sorry :( Please let me know if this is right :)
Answer:
"I am a laptop." (Metaphor)
"Books started swirling around becoming a tornado." (Metaphor)
"<u>Like</u> colorful snowflakes..." (simile)
"Come on Cameron, you can compute <u>like</u> a laptop." (simile)
"My laptop <u>grinned</u> at me." (<u>person</u>ification - giving an object human-like characteristics)
Metaphors are like similes, but without the words 'like' or 'as.' Metaphors sound literal, even though they are obviously just a comparison.
Final answer: First and third quotes.