Simile
Dante also uses similes, comparisons of one thing to another using "like" or "as," most notably in his remarkable description of the souls of the condemned moving onto Charon’s boat
On Odyssey:)
Answer:
She employs the literary device of "irony". Dee's ill-equipped understanding of her own heritage supports this claim. She tells her mother "that she does not understand her heritage." There is also irony in the lack of appetite for the food that has been prepared by her mother.
Explanation:
This is the most prevalent device Alice Walker uses.
By providing reasons and evidence that to back him up
Once, in a time we no longer can remember, lingering in the woods of a forest there were headless ghosts. They would only come out at night time to haunt those teenagers that were out too late. Once captured by these ghosts the teenagers were then transformed by these ghosts and turned into one of them. Legend has it that after the transformation was complete they would then disguise them as normal looking humans. They would go about their day until nightfall that's when the teenagers, not headless ghosts disguise, would eat children to give them energy and power to repeat thee cycle every night until the whole human population is gone.