Review Game Zone
Games
Test
Preview
Back
Match it!
Match it! Select the correct answer from the pull down...Good luck!
What does the author mean by: Time is a green orchard.
a narrator who knows all and can reveal motivations, thoughts and feelings of more than one character
Februaries can't die like humans can; therefore it is an example of personification
a comparison in which the tenor or the vehicle (or in some rare cases both) are left out for the reader to infer
appears contradictory or opposed to common sense, but contains a degree of truth or validity
time is always new and beginning like spring so one can always look forward
the structure of a story. The sequence in which the story is told.
generally anything that represents or stands for something else
speaker addresses remarks to a dead person, an absent person or a non-human object
apostrophe
a narrator who knows all and can reveal motivations, thoughts and feelings of more than one character
Februaries can't die like humans can; therefore it is an example of personification
a comparison in which the tenor or the vehicle (or in some rare cases both) are left out for the reader to infer
appears contradictory or opposed to common sense, but contains a degree of truth or validity
time is always new and beginning like spring so one can always look forward
the structure of a story. The sequence in which the story is told.
generally anything that represents or stands for something else
speaker addresses remarks to a dead person, an absent person or a non-human object
paradox
a narrator who knows all and can reveal motivations, thoughts and feelings of more than one character
Februaries can't die like humans can; therefore it is an example of personification
a comparison in which the tenor or the vehicle (or in some rare cases both) are left out for the reader to infer
appears contradictory or opposed to common sense, but contains a degree of truth or validity
time is always new and beginning like spring so one can always look forward
the structure of a story. The sequence in which the story is told.
generally anything that represents or stands for something else
speaker addresses remarks to a dead person, an absent person or a non-human object
third person omniscient
a narrator who knows all and can reveal motivations, thoughts and feelings of more than one character
Februaries can't die like humans can; therefore it is an example of personification
a comparison in which the tenor or the vehicle (or in some rare cases both) are left out for the reader to infer
appears contradictory or opposed to common sense, but contains a degree of truth or validity
time is always new and beginning like spring so one can always look forward
the structure of a story. The sequence in which the story is told.
generally anything that represents or stands for something else
speaker addresses remarks to a dead person, an absent person or a non-human object
symbols
a narrator who knows all and can reveal motivations, thoughts and feelings of more than one character
Februaries can't die like humans can; therefore it is an example of personification
a comparison in which the tenor or the vehicle (or in some rare cases both) are left out for the reader to infer
appears contradictory or opposed to common sense, but contains a degree of truth or validity
time is always new and beginning like spring so one can always look forward
the structure of a story. The sequence in which the story is told.
generally anything that represents or stands for something else
speaker addresses remarks to a dead person, an absent person or a non-human object
This falling spray of snow-flakes is / a handful of dead Februaries
a narrator who knows all and can reveal motivations, thoughts and feelings of more than one character
Februaries can't die like humans can; therefore it is an example of personification
a comparison in which the tenor or the vehicle (or in some rare cases both) are left out for the reader to infer
appears contradictory or opposed to common sense, but contains a degree of truth or validity
time is always new and beginning like spring so one can always look forward
the structure of a story. The sequence in which the story is told.
generally anything that represents or stands for something else
speaker addresses remarks to a dead person, an absent person or a non-human object
plot
a narrator who knows all and can reveal motivations, thoughts and feelings of more than one character
Februaries can't die like humans can; therefore it is an example of personification
a comparison in which the tenor or the vehicle (or in some rare cases both) are left out for the reader to infer
appears contradictory or opposed to common sense, but contains a degree of truth or validity
time is always new and beginning like spring so one can always look forward
the structure of a story. The sequence in which the story is told.
generally anything that represents or stands for something else
speaker addresses remarks to a dead person, an absent person or a non-human object
implied metaphor
a narrator who knows all and can reveal motivations, thoughts and feelings of more than one character
Februaries can't die like humans can; therefore it is an example of personification
a comparison in which the tenor or the vehicle (or in some rare cases both) are left out for the reader to infer
appears contradictory or opposed to common sense, but contains a degree of truth or validity
time is always new and beginning like spring so one can always look forward
the structure of a story. The sequence in which the story is told.
generally anything that represents or stands for something else
speaker addresses remarks to a dead person, an absent person or a non-human object
Check it!