simile
A simile is a comparison between two unlike things using like or as. There are actually two similes in this line. The first is the comparison of the speaker's body to a harp. The second comparison is the woman's words to a harpist's fingers.
A metaphor is a comparison between two unlike things without using like or as. Personification is giving a non-human thing human-like traits. A motif is a dominant idea in a work of literature.
Answer: Locating Your Materials is the next step after Creating a Research plan
Explanation:
After creating a research plan, ie after getting a topic and ensuring there are materials available to gather enough content for your research, the next step is to locate materials for your research which will provide for you more direct, focused and informative sources to build up your research.
There are ways to gather resources which include,
- Primary sources-- from Research and Historical documents, Autobiographies etc)
-Secondary Sources---from internet, search engines scientific reviews etc
-Human Sources (interviews or eye witness)
Answer:
In many areas of the Andes, farmers, communities, and the Inca state constructed agricultural terraces (andenes) to increase the amount of arable land. Andenes also reduced the threat of freezes, increased exposure to sunlight, controlled erosion, and improved the absorption of water and aeration of the soil.
Explanation:
Answer:
The answer is indeed letter C. The word is used mainly in Great Britain, not in the United States.
Explanation:
<em>Brit and US</em> are geographical labels found in dictionary entries. They come in parentheses and are used to indicate where that word is mostly used. Thus, if the label Brit comes after a word, it means it occurs typically in British English - that may include other varieties, such as Australian English -, but not in American English. An example would be the informal word "bevvy", which refers to an alcoholic beverage. In a dictionary entry, we could find bevvy (Brit).
Geographical labels are also used to indicate that a certain way to spell a word belongs to one of the varieties of English as well. For example, the color gray has different spellings according to where it is used. Thus, we would find grey (Brit.) and gray (US) in a dictionary entry.