Typically in the introduction paragraph, the first sentence in the essay is the topic sentence.
Answer:
when I was a kid, I loved to read detective novels.
My neighbor is such a nuisance that he always played loud music.
Compaq made computers but it never made cars.
I am sorry I can't hear what you are saying because everyone is talking so loudly.
Right now I thought that she should read something else.
there you go !
Answer:
1. I looked for him everywhere but I couldn’t find him.
2. My father is fairly better to day.
3. No one can recite the poem as good as he does.
4. She rudely told me not to interfere.
5. I had never seen this fruit before.
6. Where is your purse? Keep it in a safe place.
7. Because the weather was gloomy, we stayed indoors.
8. He is now revising for the exams.
9. They went to bed early because they were tired.
10. How much milk is there left?
I did some research in my notes, and these are the best options I could find.
I hope this helps a bit.
The obvious answer would be C. rhyme.
As you can see, each of these lines rhyme: sea rhymes with C, and me, and be. Those words sound similar, which means they rhyme. There are no metaphors (comparisons) and onomatopoeias (mimicking the sounds from nature) here, or alliterations (repetition of the same consonant) in this excerpt.