"Through the Tunnel" tells the story of Jerry, who is on vacation with his mother. Though he is only a young boy, the story can be read about his passage into manhood.
While he is at the beach, he sees a group of older boys swimming. At times they appear to be diving, because they go under the water for a bit without immediately coming back up. When they do come up for air, they are on the other side of a large rock. Jerry realizes they must be swimming through an underwater tunnel. He feels ashamed he is unable to follow them and vows he will do it too.
He begins to practice holding his breath but this causes his nose to bleed and he feels sick. He is afraid and wants to give up. At this point, the end of their vacation is getting closer, and Jerry knows the time is now. Basically, he's afraid to do it and he's afraid not to do it.
Eventually, Jerry jumps into the water and swims through the tunnel. He's afraid but he keeps going anyway. After a few minutes he appears on the other side -- he's accomplished his goal and feels triumphant.
This quite literally mimics a boy moving into adulthood. He has set a challenge for himself and is scared by the thought of it. Likewise, growing up is challenging and scary. He has moments when he thinks he cannot possibly continue, but he does. Growing up is the same way.
At the end of the story, he emerges on the other side a new person -- one who has moved through his fear and is now triumphant. In this way, swimming through the tunnel symbolizes a boy growing into a man.
To answer the question above if where is Wiesel at the beginning, Wiesel or Eliezer was in the his hometown, SIghet in Hungarian Transylvania.Studying the Torah, it is the first five books of the Old Testament and the Cabbala a Jewish mysticism doctrine.
The evidence from the song supports the answer to Part A are "Look around, look around at how/Lucky we are to be alive right now!".
<h3>What did Thomas Jefferson say approximately overthrowing the government?</h3>
“Whenever any shape of the presidency will become adverse of those ends [life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness] it's miles the proper of the humans to modify or abolish it, and to institute new government Thomas Jefferson.
"Revolution and Reformation." Thomas Jefferson on Politics and Government. Compiled and edited through Eyler Robert Coates, Sr. "A Little Rebellion Now and Then Is a Good Thing: A Letter from Thomas Jefferson to James Madison." Early America Review 1, no.
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Answer:
B) While most modern zoos do not teach animals to perform "tricks," they do train animals to respond to certain commands to make them safer to handle, move and examine.
Explanation:
The sentence lacks parallelism, which occurs when there are similar grammatical structures within senteces and paragraphs. In the sentence given, the last part that refers to the reasons why animals are trained has different and incorrect verb forms, which make the sentence difficult to read. Thus, the correct version includes the full infinitive <em>to </em>for the verbs <em>handle, move </em>and <em>examine</em>.