The correct answer is C. A simile uses as or like to make a comparison and a metaphor doesn't.
Explanation:
Both simile and metaphor are figures of speech widely used in literature such as poetry to create a comparison between two ideas, concepts, people, etc. This means they both had the same objective and therefore are used similarly. Despite this, simile differs from metaphor because in simile the comparison is explicitly stated by the use of words such as "like" or "as" for example in "Your eyes are like stars", but this is not necessary in the case of metaphors, for example, "Your eyes were stars" is a metaphor.
To inform the reader of Mrs. Flowers's social position.
By pointing out that Mrs. Flowers was "the aristocrat of Black Stamps", Angelou wants to draw a parallel between the uneducated and underprivileged society of black people and the "normal", white world outside. Black people can also have aristocratic manners - if and when they are provided with the means to educate themselves. Aristocracy is here a metaphor for all the privileges that black people were deprived of. A little girl cannot think in concepts, cannot identify the roots of her obsession with her role model, but simplifies it and interprets it as gentility. Mrs. Flowers is everything that she wants to become when she grows up.
Answer: Chocolates, especially dark.
Explanation:
It's bitter and sweet whats not to love?
( A) compare and contrast