figurative language goes with "he allows her in church, as well as state, but a subordinate position, claiming apostolic authority for her exclusion from the ministry"
connotative language goes with " he has monopolized nearly all the profitable employments"
technical language goes with " he closes aganist her all the avenues to wealth and distinction"
Creo que si miras bien la respuesta la encontrarás sé que puedes sin ayuda
Two good things that body paragraphs should contain is evidence/cite/quote and an answer to the original question or topic. <span />
Answer:
Simile: "as swift in motion as a ball"
Allusion: "And therefore hath the wind-swift Cupid wings."
Metaphor: "Therefore do nimble-pinion'd doves draw love,"
Explanation:
The scene described above reports the moment when J * sends a nurse to make sure Romeo is ready for the wedding. Nurse takes too long to bring news which makes J * nervous, impatient and apprehensive. To highlight these feelings, Shakespeare uses some figures of speech such as:
Simile - "as swift in motion as a ball": The simile allows the author to compare two things that are very different from each other and that do not have a well-established relationship.
Allusion - "And therefore hath the wind-swift Cupid wings.": The allusion allows a reference to be made in something that exists in another work, or universe, or even a reference to a person, music, book, among other things.