After doing some online searching, I've found that this question refers to figurative language. It is not an incomplete question, it was just missing the context for people to be able to understand it. Now that I know what it is about, I can safely answer:
Answer:
Simile.
Explanation:
In the phrase "Like burnt-out torches by a sick man's bed" we have something being compared to something else. Even though we don't know what it is, we know it is compared to burnt-out torches.<u> The comparison was made with the help of a support word, "like".</u> Its purpose it to attribute one or more qualities of a burnt-out torch to something else by saying they are similar. <u>Comparisons that use support words are called </u><u>simile.</u> They are a very common figure of speech along with metaphors, with the difference that metaphors also make comparisons, but without using support words.
Answer:
Explanation:
In any English sentence, there can be up to five types of sentence element. Although the bare minimum needed is 3, to complete a meaningful sentence, but then in total there are 5. The five elements of sentences are
1 subject
2 verb
3 object
4 predicative (also called complement)
5 adverbial (also called adjunct)
In the sentence we have in the question, there are 3 elements
Subject
Verb
Object
With the subject being "the earthquake"
The verb being "destroyed" and
The object being "the town"
I hope you understand.
Prefix is Intra meaning "within," and the latin word murus, meaning "walls"
Definiton; Situated or done within the walls of a building.
The answer is: C
Cause I had it before I got it Right