Answer:
I think it's B
Explanation:
Super sorry if I get this wrong qwq
Answer:
It's c, hyperbole
Explanation:
Its an exageration because she said "a million times"
Answer: ok
Explanation:
1. The sitter had to sing <em>"I'm a Little Teapot"</em> before Suzie Wood had to go to bed.
2. Me and him was paid fifteen dollars for the work we done.
3. "We don't have any room for any more pets" explained Mother.
4. Why did you eat those chips, dip, and olives so close to lunchtime.
The underlying universal message of a text is the theme.
The theme is a big idea, something that you can learn about life in general.
Here are some examples of themes found in literature:
Love, such as Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, a tragic tale of forbidden love with terrible consequences.
Death, The Fault in Our Stars features teenage characters coming to terms with their mortality in the face of terminal illness.
Good vs. evil, The Chronicles of Narnia, C. S. Lewis', follows four siblings who pass into an entirely new world, in which they encounter characters both good (Aslan) and evil (The White Witch)
In fact, Minnijean is actually Melba's closest friend in the group.