Answer:
He tells Rainsford that he had come to the point in his life that he felt bored with every other type of animal because "they were no match at all for a hunter with his wits about him and a high-powered rifle." Basically, there was no more intrigue or excitement in hunting for Zaroff, so he decided to hunt man.
Answer:
Ill wait until they arrive
Explanation:
The appositive phrase is not Maya Lin, like the comment above me stated, but it is B) Chinese-American.
An appositive phrase is usually separated from the rest of the sentence by commas, and it describes the subject, which here is Maya Lin.
Answer:
personification and imagery
The answer is a simile. This is because similes compare two things (these things here are his life and the dusty yards) by using like or as (specifically here as).
The other ones don't make sense: nothing is being over exaggerated (hyperbole), there are no repeating consonants (alliteration), and there are no human characteristics being given to inhuman subjects (personification).