The sentences have been correctly matched to their literary devices below:
- Homophone: She mixed the flour, while sniffing the flower.
- Pun: A horse is a very stable animal.
- Homonym: Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana.
Homophones are two words that have the same pronunciations but different meanings. Flour and flower are homophones.
Pun is a literary device that plays with words. Stable is the pun in the sentence. It is played with a stable- the place where horses are kept.
Homonyms are words that have same spellings and pronunciations but different meanings. Flies are the homonyms in the third sentence.
Learn more about literary devices here:
brainly.com/question/2183813
It might be said that the first lesson of the poem is to float on one´s back (option A) It seems that a father is teaching his daughter to swim on her back. This can be inferred by the use of certain words such as "Lie back daughter" "spread your arms wide". It also might be understood that the lesson is deep that that, It might suggest a father letting her daughter go, letting her be because she is going to be safe.
A would be the best answer since humans throughout history have desired, experienceed, and feared many of the same things. (i.e. love, death, loss, hope, redemption, ect.)