Answer:
B. to deepen his readers' connection to and understanding of the hardships endured by Somali refugees
Explanation:
"City of Thorns" is the book written by Ben Rawlence that portrays the hard and difficult lives of five individuals in a refugee camp with very few resources, political representation and help. With this book, the author seeks to show the difficulties that refugees face and the political factors that keep them there, in addition to showing why this field exists. The author's intent is to create a deep connection between the reader and the refugees, showing that their difficulties go beyond social and economic difficulties, but are extended by political difficulties and even structural difficulties, health, food, among others.
Answer:
The Grumble family found fault with everything and nothing, from the weather to the rains and the sun. And if there is nothing to grumble about, <em>"they'd growl that they'd nothing to grumble about."</em>
Explanation:
Lucy Maud Montgomery's poem "The Grumble Family" presents a neighborhood scene. In the poem, the speaker focuses on a particular family and their 'unsatisfactory' reaction to everything and how they are never contented with anything.
The Grumble family 'grumbles' about nothing and everything. Ranging from weather to complaining about nothing to grumble about, the family never seems to run out of issues to find fault with.
They grumble about <em>"the weather . . . the rain . . . the sun . . ."</em> That's not all, <em>"if everything pleased them . . . They'd growl that they'd nothing to grumble about!" </em>
A) Weight, refers to an elephants size and the importance of opinions.
Answer:
The narrator repeats these lines in the poem to let the reader know that they are specifically referring to you as it says 'your' which is you, the reader.