Answers:
Believe it or not, yes! This is a true fact and I encourage trying it if you want proof! ;p
The question says 'this' vase. But there isn't any picture of the vase provided here. So I'm considering it as 'the' vase, an ordinary vase, and based of that I'm providing an explanation.
Answer: Option A, Option B, Option C, Option F.
Explanation:
If I would be writing a poem on vase then I would mostly certainly include the topics of beauty, imagination, creativity, and art.
A vase is a container for displaying flowers, which symbolizes beauty. The poem will include the beautiful description of the vase. Creativity and art go hand in hand. There should also be the inclusion of the structure of the vase, its color, and its appealing design.
A good poem is the one where the poet uses his creative imagination. A poem is nothing without imagination. And thus inclusion of this topic is mandatary. With my own imagination I would try to illustrate the vase from a different perspective, thus giving the poem a meaning.
The word or phrase broken into syllables.
the word or phrase with the pronunciation indicated through the use of diacritical marks – marks that indicate the vowel sounds such as a long vowel or a vowel affected by other sounds; accent marks, a mark called the schwa that tells you that the vowel is in an unaccented syllable of the word.
the part or parts of speech the word functions as – for example as a noun (n.), verb (v.), adjective (adj.), or adverb (adv.).
related forms of the word, such as the plural form of nouns and the past tense of verbs.
the definition or definitions of the word or phrase. Generally dictionaries group the definitions according to a word's use as a noun, verb, adjective, and/or adverb.
the origin, or etymology, of the word or words, such as from the Latin, Old French, Middle English, Hebrew, the name of a person. Some dictionaries use the symbol < to mean "came from." For example, the origin of the word flank is given as "<Old French flanc<Germanic." This tells us that flank came from the Old French word fanc. The French word in turn came from the German language. Some dictionaries use abbreviations to tell you where the item came from: OE for Old English, L for Latin, and so forth.
Taking into account that a simile is a literary device used to compare two unlike things, the following examples provide a clear use of this resource in Shakespeare's masterpiece "Hamlet" (act three scene one):
King Claudios: <em>"For we have closely sent for Hamlet hither,
that he, </em><em>as </em><em>'twere by accident, may here affront Ophelia." </em>
Ophelia: "...<em>words of so sweet breath composed </em><em>as</em><em> made the things more rich..."</em>
Words such as "like" or "as" help the reader identify the use of this figurative speech.