In Jane Eyre, a teacher of history and grammar, Miss Scatcherd, whips Jane's best friend, Helen Burns. She also sentences Helen "to a dinner of bread and water . . . because she had blotted an exercise in copying it out." When Jane advises Helen to resist Miss Scatcherd's treatment, Helen tells her that "it is far better to endure patiently a smart which nobody feels but yourself, than to commit a hasty action whose evil consequences will extend to all connected with you; and besides, the Bible bids us return good for evil." Sometime later, Helen dies of consumption.
(I Hope This Helps)
Answer:
You can take your time on tests, and when you're done check you're answer. You can read your essays backwards(when you do this your brain pays more attention because it is doing something different). You can finish work on time. You can ask for extra credit options. You can study for tests everyday(if you study before you go to sleep it helps you remember what you need to).
Explanation:
I believe it's A) It build readers' sympathy for the speaker and his problem because it builds on how young they were when they fell in love with each other.
Answer:
How strongly two things are being compared
Explanation:
Both simile and metaphor are figures of speech used to compare two different, unrelated, things that share some kind of quality. However, there is a difference. The simile uses words <em>like </em>and <em>as</em>, while the metaphor omits them, stating that something is something else. This is why we can say that the metaphor is a stronger type of comparison.