Answer:
"A metaphor is a figure of speech that pulls comparisons between two unrelated ideas." - Masooma Memon
For example: His words cut deeper than a knife.
It's different from a simile because a simile usually uses "like" or "as" instead of just being more... straightforward about it (if that's the right way to describe it) like metaphors do. Metaphors say that two things are similar not literally, but figuratively and poetically.
Example of simile: You are like a summer's day.
If this was said like a metaphor, it'd be: You are a summer's day.
One is if you might need to risk your life to save a family member. The reward heavily outweighs the risk because other wise you could never see them again.
Precisely the author keeps the interest of readers not describing clearly the kind of relationship in Giselle's family. By doing this, readers had to imagine and assume how it was. Instead, the author described better scenes with Dark Star and the influence of books about horses in Giselle's life and actions. Also the fact that she broke her arm but not referring to it in detail leads the readers to imagine and guess what could have occurred.
Answer:
the repetition of the same consonant sounds in a line of text. These alike sounds can appear anywhere in the word, but will usually be found at its end or middle, or at the end of the stressed syllable. What's vital is that the repetition occurs in quick succession, as in: pitter-patter.
Explanation: