Answer:
Potter and art was taught to the senor classes by Farida.
<span>D. imperturbable
In the passage, the correct word is "imperturbable". This is an adjective simialr to "calm"</span>
Answer:
One day my family and I went to Savannah Georgia for a vacation. We stayed in a good hotel and ate delicious food. My favorite part of the whole vacation was the gigantic candy shop that was right down the road from our hotel, I ate so much candy I thought I would burst! They had candy from all over the world, even chocolate-covered crickets. After eating way too much taffy and chocolate I was feeling sick to my stomach, so my mother took me to Walmart to get some medication to help get rid of nausea. While we were walking I was not paying attention to where I was walking because I was reminiscing on all the delicious candy, before I knew it I had walked straight into a trash can! The trash went everywhere and I was so embarrassed that I left the store without getting anything for my stomach. I learned two lessons that day, one, to not eat so much candy at once, and two, always watch where your walking!
Explanation:
Answer:
1. He looked solid like an oar, whereas Jesse...well, he was like water, thin and quick." Simile
2. "The first week of August was reasserting itself after a good night's sleep." Personification
3. "A dragonfly, a brilliant blue jewel, darted up and paused over the lily pads, then swung up and away." Metaphor
4. "Now, remembering the visits of the night before, she smiled-and found that she loved them, this most peculiar family." Not figurative language
5. "I wanted to, heaven knows. But Winnie, how'd it have been if I had?" Idiom
Explanation:
Figurative languages are words used in ways that do not portray their regular meaning in order to make sentences clearer and more meaningful to the reader.
- Simile is the direct comparison of objects that are completely different but have similarities. In the first sentence, the pronoun, "He" was directly compared to an oar.
- Personification is the assignment of the attributes of non-living things to living things. The month of August was presented as a person that could reassert itself and also have a good night rest.
- A metaphor is the indirect comparison of objects. In the third sentence, the dragonfly was indirectly compared to a brilliant blue jewel.
- An idiom is a word whose meaning cannot be deduced from its regular usage. The idiom "heaven knows," symbolizes the truthfulness of what the speaker was saying.