The first one!
"The trees' branches ripped at her jacket as she ran through the forest."
Personification gives inhuman things, like a tree, human qualities. For instance, a tree can't literally rip as someone's jacket. Only an actual person can.
Answer:
As young people most of us have a pretty established comfort zone. At home with mom and dad, in a community that has known you for probably a good part of your life. You have your established, friends, activities, hangouts and possibly jobs. We become comfortable in these daily roles and the idea of breaking out them can be scary and uncomfortable.
The problem is, you learn the most in uncomfortable, unfamiliar situations. In our daily routines, you know how to act and respond to people and your surroundings. Being in a new place, with different people, who hold different values and go about life differently (or not so differently you may find) strips all that familiarity away.
It can be scary, but once you figure out that you can connect with people despite differences, and you can navigate foreign environments, you become a smarter, more competent individual. Embrace the discomfort. Search for it, because it is helping you grow.
Mary is the recipient of ‘Empathy’.
<u>Explanation
:</u>
Empathy means to be in another person’s shoes and try to understand what they are going through.
Empathy is of three kinds – cognitive, emotional and compassionate.
Mary is the recipient of primarily the third kind.
Generally, when someone relates a harrowing experience, he/she expects you not only to understand what you are going through or a similar emotional experience in return. What they expect you to do is to take some action to mitigate the trouble.
Here when Mary relates her tale of distress to her friend, she is compassionate enough to understand what she is going through and in order to make her feel better, she hugs her and showers praise upon her.
It is more sincere than sympathy. She feels sympathy and shows empathy.
Answer:
its B
just trust me for once in life