Answer:
A great metaphor recasts the familiar or mundane as something strikingly different yet truly parallel. It gives a startlingly vivid picture or brings a surprising insight. A bad metaphor fails to achieve the parallel, or the fresh insight, or both. The element of surprise is an important part of a great metaphor.
Explanation:
Answer: A) It uses parallel grammatical structures.
Explanation: parallelism is a literary device that consists in the repetition of the grammatical structure of different words or phrases in a sentence or paragraph, in order to emphasize an idea or to create an impact in the audience. In the given passage from John F. Kennedy's Inaugural Address, we can see an example of parallelism in the way that he uses parallell grammatical structures like "...pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe."
The correct answer here is that in the extract included above, Bharat is characterised as a reluctant King.
Answer:
a
Explanation:
I already took this question and it was a I'm pretty sure
"But in these cases
We still have judgment here, that we but teach
Bloody instructions, which, being taught, return." this is because macbeth fears duncan.