Your answer is gentle souls are often disguised by rough exteriors. The others do not cover the overall theme of the book. Yes some rich and poor kids do not get along, but that is not an overall lesson. Also how often did they walk home alone. The story does not revolve around that. Last, Cherry was not a main character, she was not a main part of the plot. So your answer is once again the first one, it goes with the overall plot of the story.
In Part A, the presence of the simile is comparing the daffodils to the stars by using a comparison through the comparison word "as". The characteristic that the author is comparing is continuous. Something continuous never ends; therefore, the correct answer is that the simile describes the endless rows of daffodils.
In Part B, the mood that the author creates through the use of the simile mentioned in Part A is C: energetic. In the sample sentence, the word twinkle implies movement, and this movement indicates that being energetic is one of the characteristics of the daffodils.
4. Am looking 5. Writes 6. Bites 7. Called 8. Opened 9. Found 10. Comes 11. Gets
When the rebels attacked Mogbwemo, Ismael Beah<span> was away in another town called "Mattru Jong" with his brother, Junior & their friend Talloi. They went there to take part in a talent show. This is from Jourdan Baldwin's work entitled "A Long Way Gone" which was based from the Sierra Leone civil war.</span>