First, pick a feeling. This could be as vague and easy as anger~sadness~excitement~fear, or as nuanced as contentment... etc.
Then go through your senses and find words and concepts that remind you of that feeling. ie, Anger:
-FEEL the beating heart and heat in face and blood, the sweaty palms
-HEAR a ringing in your ears, or a shout you make
-SEE your vision become tunnely and closed off, or your face go read
-TASTE metallic in your mouth, or blood, or a food that reminds you of a time you were angry
etcetera.
Now, think of words that'll describe those senses. A beating heart is POUNDING and DEAFENING...
The feeling is your MOOD, establish this first ("I was angry"). Then use the descriptive WORDS to describe the SENSES.
Right off the bat you can cross out idiom off the list, which leaves us down to slang, jargon and dialect. It isn't very likely it's dialect since that refers more to regional language or a specific group of persons. Now we are down to two possible answers, slang and jargon. Slang is categorized as very informal and is not connected to a particular group or profession. I'm not sure which English you are in but jargon is one of the rhetorical devices learned in AP Language and Literature. To be more specific, jargon IS the language which is involved with a particular group or profession. For example, in terms of running some jargon could be "fartlek" and "strides".
b) He still has pride despite living in such poor conditions.
Answer:
To guide the discussion among the group
Explanation:
Answer:
If this is asking to pick any word that goes well with it an example could be eventually then or later. If this has a specific word bank to choose from please let me know.
Explanation: