J. Read the passage the answer the following questions: I had just dived off my paddleboard to go spear fishing when the lights went out I heard this loud noise like a garage door slamming and it was completely dark. Suddenly I saw these big white things. I thought they were pieces of fibreglass-that a boat had just got me. When I touched them, I realized they were teeth. The shark had hold of my head. When he clamped into me, it was an awful crunch. His teeth were like razors. I was hanging out of the side of his mouth and his front teeth were buried through my cheekbones and nose. But it didn't hurt - not until later. He didn't take me down; he took me out of the water, about a meter. I saw we were moving fast, and I tried to pull my head out. I reached up on the shark, and it was flat with a sandpapery feel. I went berserk. I started pounding on him. I don't know if that was what made him let loose, but if he had finished the bite, I would have had no brain. The shark went underneath me and I saw a part of his head. It was wider than my shoulder. I swam back to my board, blood pouring out of my face. They flew me to a hospital. I caught my reflection in the helicopter window- I looked like mince. I ended up with thirty or forty stitches in the front and twenty-eight or thirty in the back. Now I've got one bad scar near my eye and another across my nose, but they've faded down and fit into the wrinkles. Answer the questions. 1. What does the writer compare the shark's teeth with?
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the writer compares the shark's teeth with razors and fibreglass.
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Answer:
the writer compares the sharks teeth with razors and fibre glass.
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