As follows:
1. Peach blossom (red), he said to (bee): "I am (spring)."
2. Peach blossom (red) Laughing), he said to (bee): "I am (spring)."
3. Peach blossoms (in full bloom), he said to (white clouds): "I am (spring)."
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Imitation refers to composing a sentence in imitation of a specified sentence or writing a paragraph or essay in imitation of a given paragraph or essay, among which imitating sentences is the most common. Imitation sentences refer to selecting one or more sentences with the same sentence structure and coherence between content and context in a certain language environment and according to the needs of language expression with reference to the sentence structure provided in the question stem.
Methods to answer imitation questions:
(1) Analyze the sentence structure. First analyze the large structure of the sentence, and secondly analyze the small structure within the sentence. Once you understand these, you can consciously compose sentences according to the structure of the example sentences when imitating them. In this way, you will have clear pertinence in imitating them.
(2) Clarify the rhetorical method. Sometimes the question clearly requires which rhetorical words to use, and sometimes it needs to be analyzed from example sentences. The rhetoric of the imitation sentence should be the same as that of the example sentence.
(3) Understand emotions and refine language. First, the internal logic must be consistent. It is necessary to deeply understand the content of the example sentences, analyze the implicit information of the sentences, and grasp the internal connections of the example sentences, especially the relationship between clauses. Secondly, the emotional style must be consistent. Pay attention to the emotional tone of the example sentences: such as sadness, joy, heavyness, and brightness.