Question
The sun wakes up,
orange embers on the horizon.
Light strikes the buildings like flame.
The city yawns, stretches, awakes.
And like a spark catching, I, too,
start the day
Use the poem to answer the question.
Draw a conclusion about the author’s purpose for the use of figurative language in the last line.
(1 point)
Responses
The figurative language compares a spark to the speaker’s appearance.
The figurative language compares a spark to the speaker’s appearance.
The figurative language unites the sunrise, the waking city, and the speaker in one moment in time
orange embers on the horizon.
Light strikes the buildings like flame.
The city yawns, stretches, awakes.
And like a spark catching, I, too,
start the day
Use the poem to answer the question.
Draw a conclusion about the author’s purpose for the use of figurative language in the last line.
(1 point)
Responses
The figurative language compares a spark to the speaker’s appearance.
The figurative language compares a spark to the speaker’s appearance.
The figurative language unites the sunrise, the waking city, and the speaker in one moment in time
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The figurative language unites the sunrise, the waking city, and the speaker in one moment in time.