Me, you, him, her, it, us, them
I can't tell what's the poem and what's the question, maybe can you put the poem in quotations? Either that or you didn't write it correctly.
Answer:
<h3><u><em>
The information the author could add is evidence to show why Washington believed the government was not working.</em></u> Answer choice B.</h3>
Explanation:
Answer:
Option A :
I see the redness around your eyes,
I hear the faint noise of your cries,
and notice this is something that,
someone else has torn apart,
And even though this sad I feel,
Makes me wanna set you free,
And let you flee from the memories,
That you had never texted me,
Left me on read,
And repeat,
See that im sorry,
nothings left for me,
Im not gonna talk to someone,
who has no respect for me.
Explanation:
Girly idek
Hi. You didn't submit the part of the text that features the metaphor. This makes it impossible for this metaphor to be analyzed and for an opinion to be issued. However, I will try to help you as best I can.
A metaphor is a figure of speech that presents a comparison between two elements. This comparison is made implicitly, but it is possible to see that the author of the text is establishing a relationship between the two elements. To analyze this comparison, you must locate the place in the text where this metaphor is established, you already know that this metaphor is related to the ants and the umbrella, which makes it easier for this metaphor to be located in the text.
To show your opinion about this metaphor, you must understand what is being compared in the metaphor. When you understand this, you can give your opinion on whether this comparison has deep meaning, whether it presents a lesson to the reader, whether it adds humor to the text, whether it adds a dark tone, among other things.