I can't see the examples. But assonance means a resemblance in the sounds of words or syllables either between their vowels (e.g., meat, bean) or between their consonants (e.g., keep, cape).
Here comes the sleek and dapper politician,
He smiles and waves, promising what he will not give.
But sadly, his unfulfilled promises we will always forget and forgive.
pilgrims walking from London to Canterbury, provided some insight into the customs and injustices of 14th-century English society; Refugee Tales does the same for 21st-century Britain. It focuses on the experiences of asylum-seekers who have been held at Brook House and Tinsley House, detention centres in Kent, and the cruelty and inefficiency of the country’s immigration system.
The fifth edition of the event took place earlier this month, and it brought together 150 volunteers and refugees on a five-day, 60-mile journey from Brighton to Hastings. By day they walked and talked; each night they stopped in a different town to stage a performance. Local audiences were invited to listen to readings of stories such as “The Fisherman’s Tal
Definitely personification.
Personification is giving non-living things living characteristics. e.g. sun slumbers.
Hope this helps!
An author might chose a first person narrator, because the first person narrator has a first person view of whatever the story is talking about. So a first person narrator makes an author more reliable and makes the story more personal.
Answer:
Beautiful
Explanation:
an adjective is kinda like a word that describes the subject, so the subject would be what? Flowers, the Flowers are what? b-e-a-utiful