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Alliteration and personification
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i have no ideia what figure of speech is applied n actually i dont wanna know cause it wont add me anything at all
well for one, the sago "palm" is not even realy a palm. its a cycade. but i know what you mean. but it seems like you are a little confused, a bonsai is not a type of tree, it is a way of growing a tree. so those "bonsai palms" you see at the store are just sago palms grown to be a bonsai. but still the same type of plant as the other sago palms you see.
They play Scrabble
"Justice is blind" is a figure of speech. A journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step. The jury is still out.
Alliteration and personification
Time went fast
i have no ideia what figure of speech is applied n actually i dont wanna know cause it wont add me anything at all
Another answer by: 6566-8990 is : His palms, if his palms are facing you it means he is looking for an argument, he is aggresive and, well, i doubt he still loves you. However, it his palms are facing his hips( not hands on waist!) that means he is quite calm, he loves you babe x
Some of the Victorian era figures of speech are epiphany, bathos, synecdoche, trope,and allusion. The Victorian era had several figures of speech that are still used today. One figure of speech was "fit as a fiddle." Another was " wring their necks."
i still can't figure it out....... i still can't figure it out.......
well for one, the sago "palm" is not even realy a palm. its a cycade. but i know what you mean. but it seems like you are a little confused, a bonsai is not a type of tree, it is a way of growing a tree. so those "bonsai palms" you see at the store are just sago palms grown to be a bonsai. but still the same type of plant as the other sago palms you see.
They could. They usually do not because most people do not hold them toward the sun. but say you was laying on a beach with your palms facing the sun it still can get burntRead more: Do_the_palms_of_your_hands_get_sunburnt
Still Green was created in 2007.
Nope. We are still good here in South Carolina.
An adverb.