Albert Marin Figurative Language

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Albert Marrin uses a great amount of figurative language, such as personification, and word choice in order to narrate this historical event and make the text more dramatic and powerful. In paragraph one and two, it states, "a cutter flicked a hot ash or tossed a live cigarette butt into a scrap bin...Flames shot up, igniting the line of hanging paper patterns." Marrin's word choice in these sentences makes the story more powerful because he used the words "flicked" and "igniting" instead of words like threw or catching fire. Also, Marrin uses a lot of figurative language. In paragraph 2, it states, "fabric began to fly around...the fire leaped out of control." This shows how Marrin used figurative language, specifically personification,

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