Here are 15 literary devices to use in your writing:
Allusion
Diction
Alliteration
Allegory
Colloquialism
Euphemism
Flashbacks
Foreshadowing
Imagery
Juxtaposition
Metaphor/simile
Personification
Onomatopoeia
Symbolism
Tone
Answer:
Michel de Montaigne
Explanation:
Sometimes it's easier to look this up rather than type out a question.
When someone signs train gone, they are signing an American Sign Language Idiomatic expression. The idiom train gone is used when you missed what is being talked about. The sign is based on the sign for train. It could be formed using both hands, creating a L-shape, U-shape, and a G-shape.
Answer:
The sentence which could effectively be placed in a summary of Chapter 4 of Wheels of Change because it expresses a key idea objectively is:
A. In the 1880s and 1890s, female bicycle racers faced a variety of opponents, including males, horses, and an occasional dog.
Explanation:
Among the options provided, letter A is the only presenting information objectively, that is, without the interference of opinions, feelings, or biases the author may have. That is not the case with the other options. Option B speaks of doing something "foolishly"; option C speaks of preference and of "kind people"; and option D speaks of supporting those woman because of their bravery. Thus, options B, C and D express opinions and feelings, which are completely subjective.
It hasn't changed anything much. I just can't go to public places and I do online schooling.