Answer:
La plaza tiene una torre,
la torre tiene un balcón,
el balcón tiene una dama,
la dama una blanca flor.
Ha pasado un caballero,
¡quién sabe por qué pasó!,
y se ha llevado la plaza
con su torre y su balcón,
con su balcón y su dama
su dama y su blanca flor.
Explanation:
The poem translates to:
The plaza has a tower
the tower has a balcony
the balcony has a lady
the lady has a white flower.
A gentleman has walked by,
who knows what for!
and he has taken the plaza
with its tower and its balcony,
with its balcony and its lady,
its lady and her white flower.
It is perhaps clearer in other languages, but conjugated verbs in English<span> can also sometimes tell us something about how many people are participating in the action of the </span>verb<span>. For example, singular subjects (he, she, it) in the present simple tense have an “s” added to them when </span>conjugated<span>: He sings. She reads.</span>
El comforta a su madre durante su muerte. Luego, cuando decir que el fe es para todo el aldea, que es un sacrificio, Lázaro hace su baptismo.
<span>Anteayer pedro tuvo in accidente y lesiona la mano. c: Buena suerte. </span>
Answer:
Metaphor
Explanation:
Es un Metaphor porque no usa "como"