Surely it's D) Simile. It is a figure of speech that is used too compare two states or smth else. You can identify it by the words "like" and "as".
The phrase means that there's a lot of dirt around us and it is a common thing to see that.
Answer:
Lowell’s study of Mars eventually led to the discovery of Pluto, which was later downgraded to a dwarf planet.
Explanation:
With what I know, which is very little seeing as I didn’t read the passage, I would say this is the best/closest answer listed. It explains what happened in the passage with as much information as they could put into one sentence without giving too little or too much. I’m sorry if it isn’t correct!
Answer:
Yes all fear is the same. It's still the same emotion from that specific part of your brain. At the end of the day, all emotions come from your amygdalae. To wrap up everything stated, all fear is the same because it all comes from the same place.
3 strikes your in refers to a law in California where if you get 3 felonies your in jail for 25 to life. "In" meaning your in jail and baseball sucks.
Answer:
The letter to a friend is below:
Dear Frank:
I hope you are very well, I want to take advantage of this letter to tell you that I have been learning a lot these days, despite the fact that much of what I have learned has been autonomous. Look, I read about the largest bee in the world, it lives in Indonesia and it is usually called Wallace's giant bee, although its real name is <em>Megachile pluto</em>, it is called that because the person who discovered it was the naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace in 1859. Imagine which has only been seen three times! The first time it was discovered, the second time in 1981 by an entomologist (a person who studies insects) named Adam Messer, and the last time was on January 25 of last year, plus it strikes me because it's roughly four times bigger than a normal bee.
Please tell me in your next letter what you have learned these days.
Sincerely,
Your name.
Explanation:
I have written a letter to an alleged friend of yours named Frank that contains some information about Wallace's giant bee, the letter mentions its discoverer, the years it has been seen, its approximate size, and some other things that might be of interest to a person, please remember to add your own name at the end of the letter, instead of the words "your name."