There is a simile. "the breeze on that lagoon had chased their tails like kittens finding there way across a platform into the forest" but there are more u gatta look into it:)
Pg 114 "and you suck it like Berengaria" simile
Simon meets the beast in chapter 8 on page 137.
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You need to read the chapters. Wiki won't help you cheat.
in chapter four on page 64 the third to last paragraph
An example of figurative language in Lord of the Flies Chapter 1 is when Ralph describes the island as a "coral island." This is a metaphor that compares the island to a precious jewel, highlighting its beauty and allure.
Pg 114 "and you suck it like Berengaria" simile
simile
In Chapter 7 of "Lord of the Flies," there are examples of figurative language such as metaphor when Golding describes the boys "swarming up this savage palm." Another example is personification when he writes about the forest "flinging into the air with gigantic alacrity." These examples help create vivid imagery and enhance the reader's understanding of the setting and the boys' experiences on the island.
Types of figurative language include simile, metaphor, hyperbole, personification, alliteration, onomatopoeia, cliches, and idioms.---In figurative language (as opposed to literal language), images and symbols are used to give enriched meaning. For example, the phrase, "the eagle flies with the dove," isn't talking about birds, but the eagle represents America and the dove represents peace. So the phrase is figurative language about America promoting peace instead of war.Figurative language includes hyperbole, metaphor, simile, and paradoxes.
Figurative language can take many forms including metaphor, simile, alliteration and personification.Metaphor:no pain no gainI'm so hungry i could eat a horsetime flies by when your having funSimile:He was as blind as a batHe was as strong as a horseShe swam like an mermaidPersonification:Death wandered the battlefieldthe words smiled at me from the bookAlliteration:The rifles' rapid rattlePeter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppersOnomatopoeia:crackwhisperboomYou are using Figurative Language if you are describing something by comparing it with something else.
One example of repetition in Lord of the Flies chapter 2 is the mention of the "scar" left on the island by the crashed plane. Another example is the boys continuously mentioning the need for a leader and discussing the idea of using a conch shell as a symbol of authority.
Page 84 is in Chapter 5 of "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding.
There are two similes in the first chapter of "Where the Red Fern Grows." One example is "straight as a crow flies" and the other is "as smooth as glass."
The title of chapter three in Lord of the Flies is "Huts on the Beach."
False. The debate between Ralph and Piggy in Chapter 1 of Lord of the Flies is an example of external conflict, as it involves a disagreement between two characters, rather than a struggle within one character's mind.
Ralph is made chief in Chapter 1 of "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding.