Answer:
Father of Anne and Margot and head of the group living in his Annex, middle 40s to early 50s, upper
middle class background, a wise man, fair, loyal, attentive, patient, intelligent, soft, level-headed,
optimistic, genuinely liked people, decision-maker, teacher, beloved by his workers who protected him
and his family as well as the other tenants of the Annex throughout the war. He was especially
susceptible to Anne’s charms. He was devoted to his wife, Edith, and comforted her whenever she was
depressed about their living conditions, the attitudes of the van Daans/Dussel, or her relationship with
Anne.
Explanation:
you have to tell us what book its about mate. theres so many books dickens has written, how are we meant to know which one you're studying?
Answer:
I can agree with that. There's no point in trying to contradict something that's 100% true
Explanation:
Answers B and C are quite vague without context.
answer D isn't important since everyone was broke and unemployed so this affected little to no people
during this time period the great depression (reason why answer D is wrong) has affected everyone so unemployment was a huge issue so it has to be answer A
It can be inferred here that the author insinuates that computers are getting better at what humans do especially translating languages. A counterclaim or assertion is posited where in the human, out of fear of redundance asserts "we're still good for something".
<h3>What is the textual evidence that indicates that the author is comparing computers and the ability of humans is?</h3>
Computer: A Computer Can Now Translate Languages as Well as a Human:”
Humans: “We’re still good for something”
<h3>What is textual Evidence?</h3>
The evidence from a text that supports the assertion made by that text is called textual evidence.
Textual evidence can also be used to buttress inferential claims.
Learn more about inference:
brainly.com/question/25280941
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