The correct option to complete the sentence is found in "similar to and different from," which is the second option and is further explained below.
<h3>Prepositions used after "similar" and "different"</h3>
The adjectives "similar" and "different" need to have prepositions placed after them in order to complete their meaning and make a comparison. "Similar" needs the preposition "to", whereas "different" needs the preposition "from".
When using both adjectives, one after the other, in the same sentence, we must place their respective prepositions immediately after each of them to avoid confusion. That means the correct option is "similar to and different from."
With the information above in mind, we can choose the second option as the correct answer.
Learn more about prepositions here:
brainly.com/question/21537048
Suck d kwiwhbbhh and it wade when the African people sides died
"Why" is the question to ask to help identify the reason for an event that happens in a historical text.
If you ask "why" an event happened, you will get to better understand the reasoning around it, what prompted the event, and some of the personal/political emotions or decisions that surrounded the event.
Answer:
See explanation for answer.
Explanation:
Metaphors:
Your eyes are as brighter than the light
Your hair is as dark as the night
Smilies:
You’re a rose yet I’m the thorns
You’re a blue sky but I’m the storm
Repetition:
I might never meet someone like you again
Guess that’s my fault, I’ll explain things then
Someone like you again
Alliteration:
Please give poor girls like me protection
Pacing in the corner with no direction
Personification:
As raindrops danced down my windshield
Guess I messed up again, not surprised then
Side Notes:
Yes, this is my original work. I'm sorry that it's not 18 lines long and the alliteration should probably be re-configured. Also, if you are a guy you definitely will need to change some of the lines and the pronouns used.
I hope I helped!
Have a lovely day!
C- it joins nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, phrases, or sentences