Answer:
metaphor
Explanation:
it compares the best friend to a night owl without using like or as
We need more information to answer this question
admonish - Suffix
admonishedv admonish. verb admonish or counsel in terms of someone's behavior. ...
admonishinga v admonishing. ...
admonishesv admonish. ...
admonishmentn admonishment. ...
admonishmentsn admonishment. ...
admonishern admonisher. ...
admonishinglyr admonishing.
demonstration (n.)
late 14c., demonstracioun, "proof that something is true," by reasoning or logical deduction or practical experiment, from Old French demonstration (14c.) and directly from Latin demonstrationem (nominative demonstratio), noun of action from past-participle stem of demonstrare "to point out, indicate, demonstrate," figuratively, "to prove, establish," from de- "entirely" (see de-) + monstrare "to point out, show," from monstrum "divine omen, wonder" (see monster).
The budget report for last year was very well researched.
You are looking for an adverb: a word to describe the adjective "researched".
"well" is the only adverb on the list. The other three are adjectives, which cannot describe other adjectives.
Pitifully
The word 'pitifully' in this excerpt is significant because it tells the reader the narrator's feelings towards the girl getting married. Without that word, there would not be the same level of insight or emotion into the narrator's thoughts. the word 'pitiful' has a negative connotation, if you are feeling pity for someone it means you do not think they should be in the situation they are in and wish you could help get them out of it. This tells the reader that the narrator feels the bride is far too young to be getting married and maybe it's something out of her control or that she is being forced into.