Answer:
Example 1: She has a bubbly personality. This metaphor is saying that the girl is cheerful and happy. It's comparing the girl and her personality.
Example 2: He's buried in a sea of homework. This metaphor is saying that the boy has a large amount of homework and can't do anything else. It's comparing the boy and his homework.
I hope this helps. :)
Answer:
1. There are very few sankes in Africa.
2. Snakes in Africa act like coward as they run as soon as they are approached meaning that they are harmless
Explanation:
Mac tootle's was mitigated by the narrator who said ;
1.) That there were very few sankes in Africa ; The narrator said he encountered very few snakes ; hardly more than five in Africa and of which they could be caught easily.
Also, the narrator said snakes in Africa will usually run when approached. These points made by the narrator mitigated Mac tootle's as this denotes that the snakes aren't harmful.
Answer:
Orwell draws parallels between Mr. Pilkington and leaders of countries who overlooked Stalin's poor treatment of his people.
Explanation:
George Orwell's allegorical science-fictional novel "Animal Farm" revolves around the story of animals overtaking their human masters and having a government of their own. And in this story, the author also provides references or allusions to numerous historical figures in the depiction of the characters.
In the given passage from the novel, Orwell depicts Mr. Pilkington's character as a parallel to world leaders who overlooked Stalin's discriminating and poor treatment of his people. Just like the human farmers found the <em>"most up-to-date methods, . . . a discipline and an orderliness which should be an example to all farmers everywhere",</em> leaders of countries around the world 'accept' the treatment that Stalin 'gave' his people. And it was this characteristic that Orwell chooses to criticize through this scene, where the farmers decided to 'follow' Mr. Pilkington's method in bringing order to his farm. Orwell adds, <em>"Indeed, he and his fellow-visitors today had observed many features which they intended to introduce on their own farms immediately."
</em>
Thus, the correct answer is the fourth/ last option.
The answer is B
Hope this help
The answer is:
Pertelote's screams are likened to the laments of Hasdrubal's wife.
In the excerpt from "The Nun's Priest's Tale" in Chaucer's "The Canterbury Tales," Lady Pertelote the hen cries so loud that she is compared to Hasdrubal's wife's weeping. The reason is, her husband was killed by the Romans, the city was burned and she committed suicide. As a consequence, since the narrator describes the hen's grieving as so loud that it attacks the air, it is assumed Pertelote grieved and groaned desperately.