Answer:
its simile bc it uses like or as, if it didnt use like or as it would be metaphor but for now its ANSWER CHOICE D
Explanation:
<span>Lincoln uses parallelism in this excerpt to acknowledge the limitations of the memorial ceremony. In this excerpt, it is parallelism because he instilled the words side by side such as dedicate and consecrate, living and dead, add or detract to clearly emphasize that what the men did will forever remain as time will pass by.</span>
The answer to the question is A
Hello. You did not ask the question to which this text refers, which makes it impossible for me to give you an answer. However, when searching the internet, I found a question that used that same text and asked what was the verb tense of the text and what was the meaning of the phrase ‘this green flooring’. If that's your case, I hope the answer below can help you.
The verb tense of the text in the first sentence is Simple Past. Since the verbs "had landed" have an action performed in the past and that has been completely completed. However, the second sentence presents the past tense Past Perfect Continuous, as it presents an action that happened in the past before another action happened, since we can see that the characters waved before starting to call out stridently.
The phrase "this green flooring" refers to the characters stepping on a floor with vegetation and therefore stepping on a "green flooring."
Current is the adjective, it describes books in the sentence.