Answer:
I think it's similes.
Explanation:
You can immediately cancel out allusions (reference to well-known person, place, or event outside the story) and hyperbole (an exaggeration, not to be entirely believed) leaving simile and metaphor. Because the word "like" shows up twice at the beginning and end- the roof came down steep and black <em>like a cowl</em>, their thick-leaved, far-reaching branches shadowed it <em>like </em>a pall- we can assume the answer is simile. Hope this helps!
Answer:
1. b 2. True 3. False 4. The second choice.
Options are she or her.
We were please to read about her winning...
In this case, we need to use "her." "She" and "her" are both gender specific pronouns. However, "she" is a subjective pronoun. This means that it can replace a noun in a sentence. "Her" is a possessive noun and can function as the possessive of "she" or the object of a verb and preposition. In this sentence we need to use "her" because she possesss the place on the ticket.
At the time they where starving and found hope in the native to show how to grow corn