Answer:
A. Bubbles formed
Explanation:
When a student added a piece of limestone to a solution of hydrochloric acid, bubbles are formed.
The bubbles are as a result of the CO2 gas that is formed.
Below is the reaction:
CaCO3+2HCl → CO2+H2O + Ca++ + 2Cl-
From the left hand side, we can see that the reaction is with limestone and hydrochloric acid. Their reaction forms carbon dioxide gas (CO2), water (H2O), dissolved calcium (Ca++) and dissolved chlorine (Cl-) on the right hand side.
With due observation, bubbles will be seen evolving from the reaction. These bubbles formed is the carbon dioxide gas which reveals that a reaction is taking place.
It's d. <span>Weeks of bottled-up tensions would be released in a few minutes of orgiastic violence, men screaming and shouting obscenities above the explosions of grenades and the rapid, rippling bursts of automatic rifles.</span>
Answer:
It is a hyperbole that means that the author's eyes were wide with fear.
Explanation:
A hyperbole is an exaggeration to prove a point. For example: "I had a thousand pages of homework." You can't possibly have that much homework; it is exaggerated to show how much homework you have.
A simile is a comparison to another thing using the words "like" or "as." For example: "My pile of homework was as thick as a box."
An oxymoron is using two words together that contradict. For example: "My homework was finished at school." Normally people do homework at home, so it is contradictory(opposite) to do it at school. Another example is "the boiling hot ice." Usually ice is freezing cold, so it is contradictory for it to be hot.
Now that you know these figures of speech, we can answer the question. It's not a simile because it isn't comparing anything with the words "like" or "as." It's not an oxymoron because there is no contradictory statement. So, it is a hyperbole. It is exaggerating how far the person's eyes were sticking out.
Answer:
basically connotative means emotions and association connected to a word it can be positive or negative depending on how this word is used
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