Answer:
A beggars dream
One day he was given a bucket of milk by a generous man. He brought the milk home and kept it beside him. He had a dream. He started his own dairy. He earned good money from his dairy. He purchased many more buffaloes and cows with his profit. Soon he was able to make a lot of money and built his own house. He was rich. He got married and got children. They played around making a noise. To make them quiet, he ran after them. He began to move his legs rapidly. In doing so, he hit the milk pot with one of his legs. The pot with milk broke. The milk was spilled all over the floor. He came to reality and realized daydream is good for nothing.
Moral: One bird in hand is better than two in the bush.
1- simile
explanation: it is relating the person to the feather, both being light, while using LIKE or AS. it is still giving the person its own identity while comparing it.
2- metaphor
explanation: it is immediately calling the girl a rocket ship, without LIKE or AS, meaning it’s relating her to it without giving the girl her own identity.
3- simile
explanation: it is relating the person to a diamond, both being shiny, while using LIKE or AS. it is still giving the person its own identity while comparing it.
4- allusion
explanation: it is indirectly referring the person’s dancing to another identity who dances as well.
5- personification
explanation: it is comparing the parking place to something non-human, as a way to express the person’s feelings about it more.
Answer:
C. The acrobat was as agile as a monkey.
Explanation:
The other examples show laziness and clumsiness, while agile means to move quickly and easily.
No, grandparents is a common noun, therefore you don't capitalize it. It would be different if you had the names of the grandparents. Like if your grandma is named Martha. You would have to capitalize their name since it is a proper noun
intents and
In this sentence "intensive" is used incorrectly. Intensive means very concentrated or focused on a specific subject. The sentence should say "for all intents and purposes". This does repeat the idea of purposes because someone's intent is their purpose, but that is the correct phrase that is commonly used. It comes from 16th century English law and means "in every practical sense".