The only one I think would work would be accelerate
The information about the Luggnaggians which the narrator
(Gulliver) offers to his audience (English people) is their traditional
customs. At some fact of the story, Gulliver gives his view on the way to
points of views of Luggnaggians by telling it in order to make his spectators
learn the conceivable errors of others and not to do it again.
I’m pretty sure A if not then I’m dumb star:).
The answer is D- to the zoo. To is the preposition and zoo is the object of the preposition.
Hope this helped ! :)
-FoxyLlama
The answer is B.The swan is a personification of death and dying even when it is not a person.The swan and the particular behaviour it has in the situation here, proves to be that of the act of dying , the moment when death becomes it all.It cannot be a metaphor because it is not implying a resemblance with an object or thing.It is not a simile because we do not have two things being compared with a <em>it is like...</em>Finally it is not a hyperbole because there is no exaggeration at anything resembling a swan.