History, asked by khushikaul1506, 1 day ago

Besides, they are about as edible as the tough, dry bark in a long dead tree is an example of which type of comparison?​

Answers

Answered by shainimohammed1984
2

Answer:

"Besides, they are about as edible as the tough, dry bark in a long dead tree" is an example of which type of comparison?

  • hyperbole
  • metaphor
  • oxymoron
  • simile

The comparison of the author's food to tree bark uses the word "as", making it a simile. A simile is a type of figurative language that expresses a Comparison between two entities/things using comparison words/terms such as "like'" as, 'resembles, and "than" Therefore, its meaning is figurative, not literal. The meaning of a simile will always depend upon the context of its use (expressesa figurative meaning that literal words do not).

Answered by ImperialRkSahu
2

Based on the given statement above, I can say that the type of comparison that is being shown is a SIMILE. A simile is a literary technique that compares two unlike objects with the use of the words "like" or "as...as". Apparently, this uses "as...as" in comparing "they" and "bark of a tree". Hope this helps.

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