Please include Line 7 for us to see.
No! There were camp followers, but no front line soldiers. Women might have driven wagons or been nurses.
There was no true front line in the civil war, but the Potomac river was one of the "front lines"
These ships were called blockade runners
Drummer boys were used to help with communicating commands to front line soldiers.
Many slaves escaped to the north during the American Civil War. If captured by the south, the runaway could have ears cut off, or be hamstrung, or branded, and taken back south. For many, the goal of safety and freedom was too great to ignore.
I'm not sure which excerpt you are referring to. Can you provide the specific text so I can identify the line containing a metaphor?
The "C" and "T" indicators on a pregnancy test signify the control line and the test line, respectively. The control line confirms that the test is working correctly, while the appearance of the test line indicates a positive result for pregnancy.
To identify the metaphor in the excerpt, please provide the specific line you would like me to analyze. A metaphor typically compares two unlike things without using "like" or "as," suggesting that one thing embodies the qualities of another.
The line "My love is such that Rivers cannot quench" contains a metaphor as it compares her love for her husband to an unquenchable river, emphasizing its depth and intensity.
To determine if the comparison in line six is a simile or a metaphor, we need to look for specific language. A simile uses "like" or "as" to make a comparison, while a metaphor directly states that one thing is another without those words. If line six uses "like" or "as," it's a simile; if it does not but implies a direct equivalence, it's a metaphor. Without the actual text, I can't definitively categorize it.
A metaphor
A note with a line through it signifies that the content is no longer valid or has been canceled.
cesaura, or cesaura's break is this // and it is to signify a pause or break in line
"To the Flowers of Heidelberg" uses a metaphor in its last line.
No! There were camp followers, but no front line soldiers. Women might have driven wagons or been nurses.
metaphor
The deep-Plunged woe line.