Asked by Katana Yama
Which is always true of an analogy?(1 point)
Responses
It is a figure of speech that explains one idea in terms of another.
It is a figure of speech that explains one idea in terms of another.
It uses like or as in its structure.
It uses like or as in its structure.
It is a restatement of a text in a reader’s own words.
It is a restatement of a text in a reader’s own words.
It is a statement that is lengthy and detailed.
Responses
It is a figure of speech that explains one idea in terms of another.
It is a figure of speech that explains one idea in terms of another.
It uses like or as in its structure.
It uses like or as in its structure.
It is a restatement of a text in a reader’s own words.
It is a restatement of a text in a reader’s own words.
It is a statement that is lengthy and detailed.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The statement that is always true of an analogy is:
**It is a figure of speech that explains one idea in terms of another.**
While analogies can sometimes use "like" or "as," that characteristic is more specific to similes. Additionally, analogies are not defined as restatements in a reader's own words or as lengthy and detailed statements.
**It is a figure of speech that explains one idea in terms of another.**
While analogies can sometimes use "like" or "as," that characteristic is more specific to similes. Additionally, analogies are not defined as restatements in a reader's own words or as lengthy and detailed statements.
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