c. representations of confusion or chaos
Answer:
Explanation:
Ideally, just one. It you put too much in a paragraph and try and develop more than 1 idea at a time, sooner or later you will get into a mess trying to keep track of how to order the second third fourth ... idea without them interfering with each other.
My answer is for the body of an essay. The first and last paragraphs can be a little more flexible, but those two ought to resemble a list rather than a paragraph in the body of an essay.
D. Universal Theme is your answer
This message shows up in many stories, and so it is a theme
hope this helps
It can show what either the main character is feeling or it can show what all the characters are feeling.
Answer:
Metaphors: His voice was a cannon shot in the silence. Dad is as strong as an ox. She sings like a bird .
Similes: My brother is a couch potato these days. My best friend holds me up like a rock .
Explanation:
Both the metaphor and the simile are figures of speech that promote subjective comparisons between two elements in the same sentence, however these comparisons have different relationships. The comparisons formed by the metaphor, relate two terms that have something in common, where one "lends" its meaning to the other term. The simile, however, makes comparisons between two terms that have nothing in common, but that can present a new meaning to this relationship between them.