The correct answer is "Thy hair soft-lifted by the <u>w</u>innowing <u>w</u>ind;"
<u>Alliteration</u> is the same sound or letter at the beginning of words which are close together.
The alliteration in this line can be spotted at "<u>win</u>nowing <u>win</u>d" because the words begin with the same letters and are close together.
That is a metaphor. Two things are being compared without using like or as.
Hope this helps. :)
<span>1. In "Crossroads: A Sad Vaudeville," the flagman's primary purpose in the play is to C. provide commentary on the central problem. His lines are there to show the readers what problems they should think about further and to criticize them.
2. </span><span>In "Crossroads: A Sad Vaudeville," D. time is the woman's worst enemy. She is scared of time, and she hates it, because it will change her whole life for the worse.
3. Put your dirty sheets inside the hamper.
The word inside is a A. preposition. Conjunctions are words such as and, or, etc. which connect parts of sentences. Interjection is a sort of an exclamation, such as ouch, or oh my God, etc.</span>