2. A kite, a beautiful kite. A pine cone, a big pine cone.
3. A kite, a beautiful kite. A pine cone, a huge pine cone.
4. A kite, a beautiful kite. A pine cone, a beautiful pine cone.
Extended data
Imitation avoids rhetorical inconsistency.
Rhetoric, as a means of expression, is obviously not enough to identify some figures of speech, and the emphasis on "application" in imitation sentences is also in line with the content of "correctly using common rhetorical methods" put forward in the examination instructions.
It has a good guiding role in improving students' language expression level. Before parody, we should analyze the figures of speech used in a given example, or metaphor or analogy, or metonymy or exaggeration, or antithesis or parallelism, which should be strictly observed.