D)Conrad is saying that some people are just cynical about the world.
C - Beautiful antique instruments renames guitars
Appositives are nouns or noun phrases that renames another noun beside it. The phrase 'beautiful antique instruments' renames and is right beside 'guitars' as it is describing them.
Answer: B
Jerome is ethical because he cited his sources and used them to develop his own slant on the topic.
Explanation:
Plagiarism is the act of taking the work of an individual, using them and passing them off as one's work. Emerson was ethical as she did not copy the works of another source word for word, in fact she blended it with her own wordings and where she couldn't find add her own perspective she paraphrased and sited the source in her speech.
Other people can see our identies be ofcause how we talk, act, or what we do around a person. Text, emails, and phone calls are a big part, because if a random person were to go through all of our social texts, they would probably discorver a big part of us. We influence others and make them have opinions about us by the way we talk, or act towards them. Body language, eye contact, and acting interested. How we talk, what we do, our actions make people have "thoughts" and opinions about us. They can see a big part of us, which is our identity. Our personality.
~Deceptiøn
The answer is a simile because it uses "like"
A personification is making an object or animal act and look like they are human. Example: She heard the last piece of cake calling her name. This is personification because cake doesn't talk like humans can.
An oxymoron is using two words to describe something that mean the opposite. It is kind of like irony.
Example: A fast turtle. This is an oxymoron because turtles are not fast.
A synecdoche is a part used to signify the whole. Example: Check out my new wheels. Wheels is a synecdoche because it is referring to a car.
A simile compares two things using like or as. Example: She is as innocent as an angel. This is a simile because it uses as to compare something.