Chugged is the main word that should give it away. It is kind of exaggerating the car going up the mountain. I assume it would be a hyperbole.
Hope I helped!
A. Anna asks Beth to go to the beach, and Beth replies, "Sure, I'd love to lay in dirt and be roasted like a pig at a barbeque!"
Sarcasm is a form of irony. It is when a person says the opposite of what they really mean. In option A, Beth does not want to go to the beach because she doesn't enjoy sitting in the sand and getting burnt by the sun. We know this because she compares the sand to dirt and being in the sun to a pig roasting at a barbeque. The other options are true statements. The rainbow does match the crayons, waffles are a breakfast food, and Linda's writing was stellar.
Answer:
1. Marriage is like a bed/couch of roses
2. She was as light/airy as a feather
3. Austin is as busy/occupied as a bee
4. Ada cried like a baby/infant
5. The pie was as sweet as sugar/candy
Explanation:
An analogy is making a comparison between two dissimilar things to show contrast or to make explanations.
Synonym is a word that is similar or identical in meaning to another word
Answer:
In the poem, the speaker seems to be discussing a pleasant date, as if oblivious to the fact that this is a journey to death. The tone of the poem seems light and perhaps even dismissive of all the scenes passing by, as though these cornerstones of life were not terribly significant. However, the underlying mood of the poem is somewhat sad because the speaker is describing a world she’s leaving behind. This difference between the descriptions of the outing and of dying creates some dramatic irony. The speaker sees but doesn’t really see the world of the living because she’s already dead.
Explanation:
This is the exact from Edmentum so make sure to change it up a little.
Personification is one. Usually in poems they use that and definetley onamonopia.