A simile is used in the line “Are frosted like a wedding-cake.”.
A simile is a comparison used with “like”, “as”, or “than”, and this line uses “like” to compare the snow-dusted tree, house, hill, and lake to a white-frosted wedding cake.
Answer:
he taught his son how to be patience and helpfulness and also wisdom
~batmans wife dun dun dun....
Answer:
Explanation:
Fellow works.
Knowledgeable also works.
Valued is possible.
Answer:
They live in the inside of the city but, they don't see much beauty. They can just look at the clouds & admire them..
Explanation:
I Love this vignette were still working on it in class! Hope your teacher approves!
These are the lines from Macbeth's soliloquy,
"Upon my head they placed a fruitless crownAnd put a barren scepter in my grip,Thence to be wrenched with an unlineal hand,No son of mine succeeding. <span>"
His kingship is in the threat of Banquo since he doesn't have a son to pass on his throne while Banquo has.</span>