It is the word "and" in the sentence.
Answer:
dear, Shina
Explanation:
last week was the most memorable weekend in my life.not because it was my birthday.i was actually tricked by my cousin Ali and our classmates.the story began when my cousin Ali asked me to accompany him to Rasfannu after school. i agreed as i had nothing to do at home.
we went there at around 4pm. we bought ice-corns for both of us.my cousin paid for them saying it was my birtday threat.then they started walking toward the other side of rasfannu.on the way we talked about our life and gossiped about classmates. after a while Ali started acting weird and threw his slippers asking me to get it for him. As if i was a dog but not to create any drama i went to get it
when i come back he was gone. i looked everywhere in Rasfannu,but no sign of him.Ali Ali i shouted. but no answer .i was getting worried and nervous.everyone at Rasfannu was looking at me. half an hour already passed. it was getting darker.when all of a sudden i got a message from an unknown number which says"if you want your cousin back alive.then come to the house right next to Rasfannu with in a minute. i almost fainted .but i hurried towards an old creepy grey colored house next to Rasfannu.i only had one question in my mind is he all right.?
i opened the door of the house it was dark inside.i saw Ali in the middle of the big sitting room.he was was tied on a wooden chair and his mouth was taped. i ran toward him and untied him. i took the tape off his mouth and at the same time the lights came on. i saw all my classmates in there. everyone shouted saying happy birthday and wished me luck. then Ali told me about their plan of getting me to Rasfannu and all.
it was the best holiday i had celebrated.
love
Nafha
<span>C would be a controversial argument. The idea of making cigarettes wholly illegal would go against the wishes of some people who value personal liberty, while it might be favored by others who have seen or experienced the negative effects of smoking long-term.</span>
The metaphor compares tea with the entirety of the British empire. It starts by saying that 'tea' should be banished and should go back to Britain "where gold enslaves", meaning where money rules all. The song becomes more broad and loses the specific relation to tea, while attacking Britain's strategy of rule, comparing Americans to being enslaved on a "yoke" (treated like cattle). The final stanza loses the metaphor and is an explicit call to action for everyone to stand up and fight for their freedom.
Answer:
Hitler youth
In his book Mein Kampf, written in the 1920s, Hitler said, “Whoever has the youth has the future.” Even before they came to power in 1933, Nazi leaders had begun to organize groups that would train young people according to Nazi principles. By 1936, all “Aryan” children in Germany over the age of six were required to join a Nazi youth group. At ten, boys were initiated into the Jungvolk (Young People), and at 14 they were promoted to the Hitler Youth. Their sisters joined the Jungmädel (Young Girls) and were later promoted to the League of German Girls. Hitler hoped that “These young people will learn nothing else but how to think German and act German. . . . And they will never be free again, not in their whole lives.”
Although membership in the Hitler Youth organizations was compulsory, many young people did not have to be forced to join. In fact, they were eager to do so, drawn by the sense of belonging and importance they felt as members of these groups. In 1938, a boy named Hans Wolf wrote a story about his experiences in the Hitler Youth that was published in a school textbook. The story was called “Comradeship.”