Grandmother does not accept her son's guilt tactics. She knows when things are wrong and she voices her extreme disgust about the Nazi party to Bruno's father.
The answer is linking verb
The correct answers are
Metaphor: She's an encyclopedia; We're just old news; I'm spreading my wings.
Simile: It's hard as steel; He's crafty like a fox; I'm strong like a bull
Explanation:
Both Simile and Metaphor are rhetorical figures used to describe a person, animal, object, etc. by making a comparison. The key difference between these two figures is that in SImile explicit comparison words such as "like" or "as" are used, while in metaphor the comparison occurs directly. This means, in the sentences "It's hard as steel", "He's crafty like a fox" and " I'm strong like a bull" there is simile due to the use of like and as, while in the rest of the options there is a metaphor because comparison occurs directly.
I'd like to say its a conversational(<span>appropriate to an informal conversation)</span> and inquisitive(curious or inquiring) tone
The pigs change laws to suit them selves like only pigs can drink alcohol or only pigs can live in the house or only pigs can sleep in the beds