Answer:
In simple words, In linguistics, identification is a linguistic characteristic of sentiment words, which differentiate between categorisations or concepts that are recognisable in a given sense and objects that are not (undefined noun sayings). There is a wide variability in the presentation of meaning across words, and certain dialects may not convey any of it.
In <em>The Life of Samuel Johnson</em>, Boswell feels a. Awe for Samuel Johnson.
After he had met Johnson, Boswell never stopped having him in his mind, and he went over the way he thought about him many times. In his biography, he excused himself for “the imperfect manner in which I am obliged to exhibit Johnson’s conversation at this period [at the beginnings of their relationship]”. He really admired his extraordinary colloquial talents, and for that reason found it extremely difficult to recall and transcript his conversation "with its genuine vigour and vivacity". Only with the passing of the years, in his words: “when my mind was strongly impregnated with the Johnsonian aether”, Boswell could perceive the variety of Johnson's wisdom and smartness properly. He made another man's life his own life's work.
Answer:
The main character journeys through distant lands, fighting to get home
Explanation:
Personification is giving human traits to nonliving things
<u>five examples are:</u>
<em>The flowers dance in the wind</em>
<em>The sun smiles at us</em>
<em>The clouds cried on us</em>
<em>The fire danced on the wood</em>
<em>The waffle jumped out of the toaster</em>
Answer:
Borrow/tomorrow
Explanation:
--hidden/wooden: "i" vs "u"
--evil/devil: Long e vs short e
--surprise/surname: only the prefix "sur" is the same. rise vs name
--borrow/tomorrow: "ow" suffix is the same. bOrrOW vs tOmorrOW
Hope this helps!