Answer:
Metaphor
Explanation:
This sentence doesn't have the words like or as comparing a few things so it can't be a simile.
This sentence doesn' t really exhausted anything so it can' t be a hyperbole.
This sentence doesn't compare something with an action which only humans can do so it isn't personification.
The person who wrote this sentence is trying to explain the sound he or she is hearing. So they added all the sounds mentioned to compare with the real noise.
If you're talking about the poem by Edith M. Thomas then I believe that the central idea is about how people can base something off of their looks. I'm not completely sure, but it talks a lot about how they look dead, but then explain that they are not. To me that makes it sound a lot like the saying "don't judge a book by its cover".
It could also mean that things take time to grow into something beautiful, and before that happens, you have to go through something difficult, seeming as if it is the end of the world. But then you blossom and bloom and everybody will look in awe.
I'm not completely sure these are right, and I'm not sure we read the same poem, but you didn't state the author's name. This was just off the top of my head but I hope it helps you or gives you an idea :)
A. a style of jazz developed in Harlem.
One of the things that helps in determining that “boogie-woogie”
refers to a style of jazz developed in Harlem is the third word of the first
line—“daddy.” What daddy is referring to
is the term “daddy-o,” which was a term for a male commonly used in the jazz
era in the Harlem area among others, but its origin is certainly attributed to the jazz
culture.
The answer to the question above is the following one:
a) The concert that I attended was held last August.
A is a restrictive clause because it modifies the noun it precedes. It provides essential information as regards the sentence. If it was dropped, the sentence would not have the same meaning.
b) The audience moved as one, the crowd swaying the music.
B is an absolute phrase. Absolute phrases are phrases that modify a noun in a sentence but they are not connected to the sentence by a conjunction. They are set off with a comma and can be deleted from the sentence without altering its meaning.
c) The concert, which had been rescheduled, was sold out.
C is nonrestrictive clause. It provides information which is considered nonessential. Therefore, it can be erased without altering the meaning of the sentence.
d) The band, a hometown favorite, came back for serveral encores
D is an appositive phrase. An appositive is a noun or a noun phrase that renames another noun right beside it. They are set off with commas.