Answer:
Both are ancient mythologies. Both Greek and Norse mythologies are polytheistic. Both have one god that rules all of the other gods. Odin is the king of the gods. He is also known as All-father. The gods or Aesir live in Asgard. The Norse believe that the world will eventually end. They call this Ragnorok.
Answer:
1. The trees hovered over the hiking trails like <em><u>an umbrella</u></em>.
2. The lightning flashed like <u><em>Zeus' thunderbolt</em></u>.
3. His heart was as cold as <em><u>stone</u></em>.
4. The car was as fast as <em><u>the Flash</u></em>.
5. The ocean was as blue as <u><em>a clear sky</em></u>.
Explanation:
Similes are literary techniques used to make comparisons between similar things though there is no relation between the two. They are the same as metaphors except that similes use "like" and "as" in each comparison.
The given incomplete sentences are filled with similes as follows-
1. The trees hovered over the hiking trails like <em><u>an umbrella</u></em>.
2. The lightning flashed like <u><em>Zeus' thunderbolt</em></u>.
3. His heart was as cold as <em><u>stone</u></em>.
4. The car was as fast as <em><u>the Flash</u></em>.
5. The ocean was as blue as <u><em>a clear sky</em></u>.
Answer:
B. a strong opinion is presented to appeal to the reader’s sense of justice
Explanation:
Imagery: <span>The brightness of her cheek would shame those stars / As daylight doth a lamp.
allusion: </span><span>Else would I tear the cave where Echo lies, / And make her airy tongue more hoarse than mine... </span>personification: <span>That fair for which love groan’d for and would die, / With tender Juliet match’d, is now not fair. </span>foreshadowing: Therefore love moderately; long love doth so; / Too swift arrives as tardy as too slow.
I would assume that the author does this to show how indifferent the person in the book is, she/he doesn’t know what they are in life, this makes it relatable to readers who have had this feeling before and it shows how the character is feeling in that moment