<em>This is like a story plus a claim following your requests. Hope it helps you, though.</em>
<h3>We call the meeting to order

11:42 AM</h3>
This is the case-claim of the missing french fries. It happened last Sunday, when I made a claim that I witnessed frozen french fries being stolen by a group of people at a store. The store retrieved the fries on Wednesday <em>today</em>. Thankfully, they were not damaged. Still in good condition, still edible. "What evidence is there"? Good question, I saw it at the store and recorded it. I presented the recording, and all is well that ends well!
<em>This claim is not based on an actual case. This is fictional, and any relation to an actual person is purely coincedential.</em>
Number 2 is correct because this is an appositive sentence structure, which means one sentence is interrupted by another.
Hope I helped!
1. idiom
2. hyperbole
3. personification
A pleasant visit to a hill station in Shimla is highly adventurous and delightful. It was more enjoyable than the last year' visit to Goa and I think, this visit to the hill station would be the best vacation experience I would ever have.
Explanation:
Adjectives can be referred as describing words and it provides an additional information of the noun. These describing words can be written to mention the levels of how you describe it.
For Example, 'visit' is the noun and 'pleasant' is the additional information which is provided and it describes more about the noun "visit". "more enjoyable" is the comparative degree of the adjective enjoyable and "best" is the superlative degree of adjective used in the above sentences.