Answer:
Explanation:
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My great-grandmother. I would've liked to have known her, a wild horse of a woman.
1. This is a metaphor.
2. In this sentence, the great-grandchild is directly comparing their great-grandmother to a wild horse.
3. She is possibly saying that their great-grandmother acted a bit "wild", like how a horse can start acting in ways not necessary or something along those lines.
[He carried her off] as if she were a fancy chandelier.
1. This is a simile.
2. In this sentence, the man is carrying a woman as if (a word used to compare something - used as a simile) she was a chandelier.
3. She is most likely saying that the man is carrying the woman carefully, since the woman is being compared to a chandelier, which needs to be transported carefully or else it would shatter and break into pieces.
The table.
1. Simile - She is comparing her name to the number 9 using the word like.
2. Metaphor - She is directly comparing her name to a muddy color by not including like or as and stating that she <em>is</em> something.
3. Simile (I think) - She is comparing the songs to sobbing using the word like.
4. Simile - She is comparing the syllables of her name to be made out of tin using the words 'as if'.
5. Simile - She is comparing the hurting feeling of saying the syllables to the hurting feeling of hitting a tin roof using 'as if'.
6. Simile - She is comparing the feel of her name to silver using the word like.
7. Not really sure; I think Simile - She is comparing her name to the thickness (or not as thick) of her sister's name.
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#teamtrees #WAP (Water And Plant)