Answer:
Option D seems like the best choice
Explanation:
hope this helps
Answer:
1. (simile)Like a bag of bricks
2.(metaphor) a tiger roaring
3.(personification) danced
4.(simile) quiet as a mouse
5.(hyperbole) never ending
6.(personification) angry
7.(metaphor) ocean of flavors
8.(personification) reached the sky
Hope this helps ;)
<span>cuisine has roots in latin (conquere - to cook)
ugly has roots in old norse (ugga - to dread)
touche has roots in french (originally 'touchér)
petite has and always has originated from french and it did not evolve
craze - swedish originally krassa - to crunch
blunder - Scandinavian origin and related to blind.</span>
Answer and Explanation:
Cleft sentences are used to connect something previously understood to new information or to emphasize something by placing it in a different clause. When we use this type of structure, we are basically dividing a piece of information into two clauses. It is common to use <em>it</em> or <em>wh-</em> words to form the cleft sentence.
1. I don't like a manager who acts like a tyrant. = What I don't like is a manager who acts like a tyrant.
2. We're looking for someone who is a team player. - What we are looking for is someone who is a team player.
3. He would prefer to walk to the theater. - What he would prefer is to walk to the theater.
4. She wrote the most popular mystery novel of the year. - It was she who wrote the most popular mystery novel of the year. / What she wrote was the most popular mystery novel of the year.
5. We saw the most dangerous snake in the world. - What we saw was the most dangerous snake in the world. / It was the most dangerous snake in the world that we saw.
6. She had a terrible case of the flu. - What she had was a terrible case of the flu.
7. I don't understand why someone took my headphones. - What I don't understand is why someone took my headphones.
Answer:
Follow the footsteps of those who won't lead you astray.