Answer:
"I am a laptop." (Metaphor)
"Books started swirling around becoming a tornado." (Metaphor)
"<u>Like</u> colorful snowflakes..." (simile)
"Come on Cameron, you can compute <u>like</u> a laptop." (simile)
"My laptop <u>grinned</u> at me." (<u>person</u>ification - giving an object human-like characteristics)
Metaphors are like similes, but without the words 'like' or 'as.' Metaphors sound literal, even though they are obviously just a comparison.
Final answer: First and third quotes.
Answer:
I
Explanation:
I don't know anything sorry for inconvenience
You use claims as an introduction, it must be a fact proven with evidence and analysis. Counterclaims can be put anywhere besides the conclusion, and it is an opposition argument for the claim. You can use counterclaims to rebut a claim and go against it.
(If that makes sense)
Answer:
Lanyon is more sociable than Mr. Utterson.
Explanation:
This is based on the story "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde". And in this story, the statement that best shows how Mr. Utterson and Dr. Lanyon differ is that Dr. Lanyon is more sociable than Mr. Utterson.