Analogies are revealing test questions causing the reader to hypothesize the relationship<span> between the example words and then finding the best match for that </span>analogy<span>. Common types of analogies used on standardized tests with examples: Opposites or antonyms. Synonyms or words with identical or similar meetings.</span>
C: Hucks pap returned
How did Huck like moving back with his Pap?
He enjoyed it, aside from the beatings
How are the townspeople looking for Huck?
shooting cannons
Answer:
"First off, the extreme word exclusively is a big warning sign that this answer is probably wrong, so you should be suspicious of" it from start.
Explanation:
"First off, the extreme word exclusively is a big warning sign that this answer is probably wrong, so you should be suspicious of" it from start. The author writes about power sellers at Ebay. Those power sellers started using Ebay as regular users but over a period of time they turned out to be the power sellers and the author mentions these power sellers in the passage.
Answer:
A metaphor; it compares without using "like" or "as"
Explanation:
it doesn't use those words, but it still is comparing the two objects