In "Code Talker" by Joseph Bruchac, a powerful metaphor is the comparison of the Navajo language to a secret weapon. This metaphor highlights how the unique qualities of the Navajo language serve as a tool for communication and strategy during World War II, emphasizing the strength and resilience of the Navajo culture. The language, like a weapon, is portrayed as both protective and empowering for the soldiers who use it.
Few people know that before the Navajo code talkers, there were Choctaw code talkers. They were a group of fourteen Choctaws employed by the Army during WWI to transmit information safely. They played a big role in the final defeat of the Germans. Then, again during world war II, they were used along with other tribes such as the Commanche, Kiowa and Seminole as well as the Navajo code talkers.
yes because he is sly and tricky. he is a good talker and can be compared to a used car salesman
Martin Luther King used both simile and metaphor in his famous speech. The metaphor he used was "Let us not seek to satisfy our thirst for freedom by drinking from the cup of bitterness and hatred".
simile,metaphor,personification,anaphora,
a kenning. ex: sea-tumult
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In the book "Code Talker" by Joseph Bruchac, a metaphor that is used is comparing the Navajo language to a code that the enemy cannot break. This metaphor emphasizes the power and significance of the Navajo language in the war effort.
A Comanche Code Talker is a Comanche Native American who is a soldier for the US Army in World War 2 and some in World War 1. The US used the Comanche language in some cases to transmit military communications. See related link below.
You have to have a coin code and enter the code in and if it has not been used, the treasure book will appear.
The Navajo Code Talker program was run by the US Marines. In WWII women were not allowed to join the Marines. The code used Navajo as a base but was encoded in that so a Navajo speaker could not understand it and would need to memorize the secret code to use it.
The literary term used in the quote is metaphor. Lady Macbeth uses a metaphor to compare her husband's face to a book where unusual things can be discerned by others.
any comparative word is used in a simile but not a metaphor
any comparative word is used in a simile but not a metaphor
You have to buy the book and look for the code. It is in the back of the book.
The code is UNIQUE and can only be used once in every book that has the last page of it, so it varies.
A metaphor for beautiful could be... You're a daffodil.
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