“…you spoke Spanish formal as your father, the judge without a courtroom.”

This quote shows what figurative language?
A. metaphor
B. simile
C. personification
D. onomatopoeia

B?

It looks to me like there are two kinds of figurative languages in that part of a sentence. I think that the main one is the judge without a courtroom is being compared to speaking a language formally. The reason that the answer isn't B. smilie, is because "you spoke spanish formal as your father" should say you spoke Spanish as formal as the judge without a courtroom. Since it is not direct, and the word "as" is used not in the way a simile would use the word "as", yes, the answer is:

A. Metaphor.
Hope this helps! :)
~ Ally

Oh ok so its A?

“…you spoke Spanish formal as your father, the judge without a courtroom.”

This quote shows what figurative language?
A. metaphor
B. simile
C. personification
D. onomatopoeia

(A)

No. It's not a simile. A simile directly compares one thing to another, "Softly, as in a morning sunrise", or "He ran like the wind."

ddrftvybunmk

yes you are correct, as it is not comparing anything, and a metaphor is like a phrase people use for a lot of things

Actually, the correct answer is A. metaphor.

In this quote, the speaker is comparing someone who speaks Spanish formally (like their father) to a judge without a courtroom. This comparison draws a parallel between the speaker's father and a judge, suggesting that their father is authoritative and speaks in a formal and impactful manner, just like a judge does in a courtroom.

A metaphor is a figure of speech that makes a comparison between two unrelated things, implying that one thing is another thing. In this case, the father's way of speaking is being compared to a judge without a courtroom. Therefore, the quote is an example of a metaphor.