Question
Which is an example of an extended metaphor?(1 point)
Responses
two lines in a poem that says an otter’s eye looks like a black walnut
two lines in a poem that says an otter’s eye looks like a black walnut
an entire poem comparing a swimmer to a dolphin
an entire poem comparing a swimmer to a dolphin
a line in a poem that says a man’s voice is the boom of a baritone
a line in a poem that says a man’s voice is the boom of a baritone
a poem that is about how the rain walks all over the city at different speeds
a poem that is about how the rain walks all over the city at different speeds
Responses
two lines in a poem that says an otter’s eye looks like a black walnut
two lines in a poem that says an otter’s eye looks like a black walnut
an entire poem comparing a swimmer to a dolphin
an entire poem comparing a swimmer to a dolphin
a line in a poem that says a man’s voice is the boom of a baritone
a line in a poem that says a man’s voice is the boom of a baritone
a poem that is about how the rain walks all over the city at different speeds
a poem that is about how the rain walks all over the city at different speeds
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The best example of an extended metaphor from the options provided is:
**an entire poem comparing a swimmer to a dolphin.**
An extended metaphor involves a comparison that is sustained throughout a piece of writing, making the entire poem a comparison between two things (the swimmer and the dolphin) rather than a single line or phrase.
**an entire poem comparing a swimmer to a dolphin.**
An extended metaphor involves a comparison that is sustained throughout a piece of writing, making the entire poem a comparison between two things (the swimmer and the dolphin) rather than a single line or phrase.
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