Answer:
Simile - a kind of description. A simile compares two things so that the thing described is understood more vividly, eg 'The water was as smooth as glass. A simile can create a vivid image in the reader's mind, helping to engage and absorb them.Generally, a writer uses similes to enable the reader to imagine in his mind what the writer is saying. This is why a writer compares one thing to another with which the reader is familiar. The speaker compares his love to a red rose that has just bloomed.Writers often use similes to introduce concrete images (like boxes of chocolates) into writing about abstract concepts (like life). Readers are more explicitly aware of the direct comparison that's being made with a simile compared to a metaphor, which is often more poetic and subtle.
hope it helps ya :-)
Answer:
Expositions are the place to show the reader a little bit of the location and what kind of time is involved in the story, along with some of the major characters.
It is the first one because it just gives better details
Sounds like rhyme. Alliteration is having the same letter start for each word- eg "Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers"