The techniques mentioned above are all literary devices. See below for more information about literary devices.
<h3>What are literary devices?</h3>
A literary device is a tool of writing that is used by authors to provide information about a broader idea in the text or story. 
Some of these devices are:
- Imagery
 - Metaphor
 - Simile
 - Personification etc.
 
It is to be noted that the excerpt referenced is unavailable hence the general answer. 
Learn more about literary devices at:
brainly.com/question/2183813
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
Mr. jones
Explanation:
Mr. jones represents a drunken old farmer who likes to antagonize animals and has created a whole mess load of misery for himself. he also represents tsar Nicholas the second he is also the only one that does not work.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer: I feel that in our generation there will be new inventions and much more modern day technology. I can imagine closets that will have ready made outfits for you as you are waking up. Our century has grown so much and I can imagine people not getting out of their houses because of it. Technology has both a negative and positive side. Positive because it helps us to do less work, and negative because... is doing less work really worth putting our physical health, mental well being and social skills at risk? It’s both harder and easier to make friends and actually be in a good state of mind if you’re using technology too much or watching a screen 24/7. I forsee that the future for my generation will become lazy and less active, which is negative in my eyes.
(If you copy my answer word for word, it’s okay :) I don’t mind )
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
A. The speaker asks the raven if he will see Lenore again in heaven.
Explanation:
The Raven is a story that creates a contradictory atmosphere by the desire to remember and the desire to forget. It exposes the lover's loneliness, despair, melancholy, sadness shown through his own madness. All these feelings, fueled by the crow's words "never again".
The lover reveals the lack of his beloved, and the words of the raven "never again" culminate in the despair of the lover, whose anguish and sadness create in him a great madness, whose delusions are based on the loss of his beloved and the loneliness he suffers from knowing that he has lost his friends, his hopes and soon his visitor, the raven.