Scandinavia....................
Question: Which kind of figurative language is used here? Every time he touches his guitar, it sings!
Answer: The figurative language used is: <u>Personification. </u>
Explanation: Personification is when qualities or abilities that only a human can have, are given to an animal or object. Writers use this to bring non-human things to life. In the sentence: ''Every time he touches his guitar, it sings!'', we can identify personification when we read ''his guitar, it sings!'', because a guitar can't really sing and this object is being given a human ability.
It's the furthest point away from Friday, but it's also the closest point to yet another Monday morning. It'd save me from yet another commute to work, battling through the honking traffic and stinking fumes. According to the Medical Gazette, fighting through the rush hour causes excess stress hormones to build up in your blood stream.<span>For me, that's yet another good reason to hit the snooze button and slide back under the duvet.</span>
There are actually two prepositional phrases in this sentence: “in the lock” with the preposition “in” and “to the front door” with the preposition “to”. However, both of these prepositional phrases serve similar purposes despite their relationship to different subjects. The first phrase, “in the lock”, tells the reader the position of the key. The second phrase similarly tells the reader where the dog is dashing to. Therefore, your answer is that the prepositional phrases are being used to indicate specific locations.
Hope this helps!
Answer: Briony begins to see reality.
Explanation:
Briony wants to say she was introduced to real life. That the wrong "understanding" was an idea aimed at a deluded vision, nobody lives in a fairy tale and she had this "weak" idea because she was being awakened to reality through the observation of her own daily life and the people around her .