As well as being useful, our possessions represent our extended selves. They provide a sense of past and tell us “who we are, where we have come from and perhaps where we are going”, says Russell Belk, who studies consumerism at York University in Toronto, Canada
Answer:
C. Visual imagery
Explanation:
This piece is about a person Lucy (whom the speaker admires a whole lot). The speaker captured the rarity & beauty of Lucy's life which was unfortunately missed by people. The speaker would describe Lucy using imagery. He likened her to:
I. the flower Violet (which is not common) in the first line to project her beauty
II. a fair star to further describe her beauty & allure in the third line
<u>In doing this, the speaker used imagery which the eyes can see </u>e.g. flower (Violet), star, sky.
Kinesthetic imagery is used to describe moving objects, gustatory imagery describes what is tasted, tactile imagery describes what can be touched or felt; all these three are NOT the correct answer
<u>Hence, the author used visual imagery. That means option C is the correct answer</u>
Answer:
The way Okonkwo refers to his banishment was that he “…had been cast out of his clan like a fish on to a dry, sandy beach, panting.” This pitiful image shows Okonkwo's personal disgust, comparing himself to a lowly creature like a fish
Explanation: