Answer:
<u>An entailment.</u>
Explanation:
Dang, my sister is obsessed with this book LOL. I wish I could ask her, but I will give it my best shot.
A regiment: a permanent unit of an army typically commanded by a colonel and divided into several companies, squadrons, or batteries and often into two battalions
An abolishment: formally put an end to
An entailment: settle the inheritance of (property) over a number of generations so that ownership remains within a particular group, usually one family.
A testament: a person's will, especially the part relating to personal property
Now, while the two last ones seem very similar, I would definitely say an entailment would be the correct answer, since you are giving your property over to them. So, <u>entailment </u>is the correct answer.
<u>Copyright: https://www.goo gle.com/search?q=dictionary+online&rlz=1CAXLEN_enUS926&oq=dictionary+online&aqs=chrome.0.0l8.4065j0j7&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&safe=active&ssui=on#dobs=entail</u>
He puts his family on display when he take in the case of Tom Robinson
<span>Blaeser, in "Rituals of Memory," expresses being torn when she was in school, as school signified the beginning of her acting differently while in school and while out of school. She was both German Catholic and Native American, and her family pulled her in a different direction than she wanted to go. To compensate, she learned both German and a Native American language, Anishinaabe, and she considered later in life how the German and Native American communities of her rural Minnesotan home coexisted.</span>
A simile can be found when using "like" or "as" between two things. Example: I'm as happy as a clown.
Your question would be a metaphor. Both things are being compared to a science expieriment, probably meaning that they need to have an outcome, but it isn't known for sure if it will be a good or bad outcome.
Things like this can be taken many ways, so if you think something else, I'm sure it would work as well.
So fred applys for a easy job