Answer:
B. Cause and effect
Explanation:
The given paragraph is structured as a <em>cause and effect</em> paragraph. This type of paragraph explains why something happens. The occurrence that takes place is defined as the effect and the thing that causes it is the cause.
Here, we have two groups of students who perceived the same lecture in two completely different ways. This is the effect. What caused this is the way the lecturer was introduced. The students' expectations (cause) affected their opinion on the lecture, the final result (effect).
(if there aren't any options) it really just depends on your opinion, but to me it would have to be 1st person. it can also can be considered the most explanatory, but again that's only my opinion.
hope this is helpful!
Answer:
Simile ↔ C) My phone slipped through my fingers <u>like</u> butter.
Personification ↔ D) The <u>face</u> of my phone had many <u>scars</u> from being dropped.
Symbol ↔ A) I wanted to wave the <u>white flag</u> after searching for my phone.
Hyperbole ↔ E) My phone <u>is my lifeline</u> to the world.
Metaphor ↔ B) I wouldn't <u>trade</u> my phone <u>for a million </u><u>dollars</u>.
Explanation:
Whatever I underlined is supposed to hint at why each sentence matches the way it does.
For example: Similes compare ideas to each other, sort of like metaphors do, but they use the words "like" or "as" to do so.
Hope this makes sense :)
Imperfect,broken, faulty.