Symbol
Simile
Personification
Allusion
The figurative language that is used in the following line from John F. Kennedy's inaugural address to the nation is personification. The correct option is C.
Personification gives inanimate objects life by enabling them to talk when they couldn't otherwise. Personification is the process of imputing human traits or feelings to an inanimate object or animal. It is the process of giving a nonliving thing the ability to do actions that only living things can.
For instance: Each morning, my alarm clock screams at me. (Even though an alarm clock cannot shout, the high-pitched sound it makes when playing music or an alarm might give the impression that it is shouting at the user every morning. As well as when people become enraged.)
Therefore, the correct option is c, Personification.
To learn more about personification, refer to the link:
#SPJ2
brackets
ellipses
quotation marks
The answer on Edgenuity2020 is brackets
Answer:
Gatsby tells Nick he fought in the WW1 and went to Oxford and was brought up in America. He gives false family background because it depends upon San Francisco. He reveals that he associated with shady types when he introduces Nick to Meyer Wolfshiem, who fixed the 1919 World Series. Gatsby tells Nick he fought in the WW1 and went to Oxford and was brought up in America. He gives false family background because it depends upon San Francisco. He reveals that he associated with shady types when he introduces Nick to Meyer Wolfshiem, who fixed the 1919 World Series.
Answer:
Surcease, Lattice and censer
Explanation:
surcease- to stop, to put an end to it
(here, the narrator wishes he could put a stop into the feelings of sorrow, as it reminds him of his loss of Lenore, his beloved.)
lattice- horizontally or vertically constructed strips of wooden panels for windows or gardens
(He thinks that he saw something at his window and is somehow intrigued by the mystery to the tapping)
censer- ornamental container for dispensing incense especially for religious purposes.
(The narrator thinks that God has sent angels to cause the air within the room to become dense and perfumed.)