English, asked by princegpt1226, 4 months ago

) Why are the children called “like rootless weeds”? What is the figure of speech here?​

Answers

Answered by abhilesh28
12

Answer:

Explanation:

In this case, the author compares the children's faces to rootless weeds to suggest that their appearance has been disturbed somehow, much like any plant that's been uprooted (can't make an educated guess as to what exactly happened without more context). It's probably a metaphor.

Answered by santoshyadav65608
2

Explanation:

the author compares the children's faces to rootless weeds to suggest that their appearance has been disturbed somehow, much like any plant that's been uprooted (can't make an educated guess as to what exactly happened without more context). It's probably a metaphor...

I hope it's help you.

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