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After reading this story, I got a great education. (modify the sick sentence)
1. After reading this story, I got a great education. (modify the sick sentence)

To express the meaning of this sentence, you can use the following three sentences:

(1) This story gave me a great education.

(2) After reading this story, I got a great education.

(3) After reading this story, I got a great education.

If you want to be an obedient little fool like many students, you can change it to (1) or (2); If you don't want to be a fool, tell your teacher: this sentence is not a sick sentence!

2, papaya results in neck, banana results in heart, grapefruit results in comb, pineapple results in scales.

This sentence uses two rhetorical devices-parallelism and analogy:

(1) The whole sentence uses parallelism, and four short sentences form parallelism.

(2) Analogy includes two situations:

One is to write things as adults. It's called personification. "Papaya results in hugging mom's neck" is anthropomorphic.

The second is to write people as things, or to write things as things. This is called imitation. The last three sentences are all imitations.