Answer:
Explanation:
Tell everyone to put there hands up on the seat in front of them or on the dash so the cops can see them and let the cop know how many people are in the car
Reading because she loves the books a lot
Answer:
Simile ↔ C) My phone slipped through my fingers <u>like</u> butter.
Personification ↔ D) The <u>face</u> of my phone had many <u>scars</u> from being dropped.
Symbol ↔ A) I wanted to wave the <u>white flag</u> after searching for my phone.
Hyperbole ↔ E) My phone <u>is my lifeline</u> to the world.
Metaphor ↔ B) I wouldn't <u>trade</u> my phone <u>for a million </u><u>dollars</u>.
Explanation:
Whatever I underlined is supposed to hint at why each sentence matches the way it does.
For example: Similes compare ideas to each other, sort of like metaphors do, but they use the words "like" or "as" to do so.
Hope this makes sense :)
Answer:
when the subject remain in last and objects remain in first this is called passive voice
Answer:
This is what I wrote (and it is not plagerized you can even check)
Explanation:
The sound that the narrator thinks he's heard at the end of the story is the old man's heartbeat but what he actually hears is his guilty conscious, because that is what is making him think that he can still hear the old man's heartbeat is that since he feels guilty about what he did his conscious is making it seem like the heart is still beating. In the text, it says that " I admit the deed-tear up the planks!-here, here! it is the beating of his hideous heart!" that shows how the narrator got tired of "hearing the heartbeat" so what he did was confess to what he did. The effect that the narration has on the story is that the suspense because in paragraph 17 we the audience are getting anxious because when the police arrive at the house were wondering at what time he will get caught.
The answer is (D)