Answer:
Dear India (or the person you want to write the letter to)
I am Rupa/Ranjit who lives in Bangalore . While I was driving to your place I saw many young children begging by the road side . I felt sorry for those poor children but could not do much for them . If I were you I would help them and let them live in a warm place like you and your children do . Do you want to live in a place like them and beg for food and money? Do you want your children to suffer like they do? I know that you do not want to be like them and also you might not want to help but you never know if this happens to you one day and you never get help. If you help some one then in return you will get a good deed back .
Thank you
Explanation:
False,because even if you change 2 words you are still taking credit for someones work.
Answer:
Desert Exile: The Uprooting of a Japanese-American Family is an autobiography by noted children's book author Yoshiko Uchida that chronicles her experiences in the years before and during her incarceration in an American concentration camp during World War II. It was originally published in 1982 by the University of Washington Press and reissued with a new introduction by Traise Yamamoto in 2015.
Uchida writes extensively about the Issei, especially through observations of her own parents, and how they responded to the enormous losses and humiliation wrought by the government's decision to forcibly remove all Japanese from the West Coast and into government war camps. It is a deeply personal book, one in which she tells of her father's abrupt seizure by the FBI from their home in Berkeley, California; of her family's frantic efforts to vacate their home on ten days notice; of being forced to live in a horsestall at Tanforan detention center; and of being sent on to Topaz, a bleak camp in the Utah desert, surrounded by barbed wire and armed guards. Through intimate, detailed accounts of the losses suffered over the duration of the years in camp, Uchida illustrates the lasting impact that the U.S. government policies had on Japanese Americans' economic, cultural, physical, and psychological well-being.
In the book's epilogue, Uchida explains her purpose in writing Desert Exile: "I wrote [the book] for the young Japanese Americans who seek a sense of continuity with their past. But I wrote it as well for all Americans, with the hope that through knowledge of the past, they will never allow another group of people in America to be sent into a desert exile ever again
Explanation:
Answer: b. Use a semicolon to separate items in a series when one or more of the items contain internal commas.
Explanation:A semicolon is used here to separate temp Arizona from Denver and Colorado and this from Honolulu and Hawaii which all have internal commas.