I believe the correct answer is - <span>a) The teen pop star was infamous for wild parties and driving under the influence of alcohol.
Infamous means to be well known for something bad: in A, the celebrity is famous because of his/her wild lifestyle. B is incorrect because you can put off a fire by doing that, and not kindle it. C is incorrect because couplets consist of two lines, not four (that would be a quatrain). D is incorrect because deceitful would mean that she cheated somebody, when in fact, she felt delightful about her score.</span>
Answer:
Some examples of common figures of speech include the simile, metaphor, pun, personification, hyperbole, understatement, paradox and oxymoron. However, these are just some figures of speech. Whenever a speaker does not intend the literal interpretation of his words, then he is using a figure of speech.
Explanation:
A. Repetition of the word lazy makes the tone angry.
When repetition is used as a literary element, it is done so for the sake of emphasizing something. When the word “lazy” is spoken by the Eldest Magician in the story, it is out of anger at that the man was complaining that he would have to row home without the help of the crab’s great wave. It was this action—the laziness of the man—that angered the Eldest Magician. As such, repetition of the word “lazy” makes the tone angry as it highlights what made the Eldest Magician angry.
All the things that Hamlet said after he asked Ophelia where her father was is already directed to Polonius. He already knew that Polonius was in the room, eavesdropping.
"Are you honest?", "Are you fair?" are the lines which Ophelia did not really understand why he was asking. This means that these lines are directed to Polonius.
"It hath made me mad" was said for them to believe that he's really crazy.