Answer: The correct answer is B.
Explanation: Exactly but it would be labeled B.
Answer:
Zora's lemon tree produces too much fruit. She gives them away, therefore, to her friends and neighbors.
Explanation:
Out of the three sentences given in the question, the correct sentence with correct punctuation will be the second option.
The second sentence's use of the punctuation marks, the separation all makes it correct. The use of a comma before and after 'therefore' is correct, for it is the joining word or the bridging word for the sentences.
Zora's lemon tree produces too much fruit. She gives them away, therefore, to her friends and neighbors.
While in the other two sentences, we see the continuous flow of the sentence without any use of the full stop.
Sentences1 and 3 are wrong as -
Zora's lemon tree produces too much fruit. She gives them them away therefore, to her friends and neighbors.
Zora's lemon tree produces too much fruit. She gives them away, therefore to her friends and neighbors.
In 'Night', the narrator is Eliezer, a Hungarian boy who was 12 years old at the moment and who was living in Sighet. This town was part of Hungary during World War II, at the time this story was set (on the contrary now it is in Romania).
Moshe the Beadle was Eliezer's teacher of Jewish doctrine and, in fact, he was an inspiring and challenging educator for this kid. All foreign Jews were sent out of town by the Hungarian police, including Moshe, as part of the anti-Semitic acts generalized all over the nazi Europe. Hungary was one of Germany's allies during World War II, and obeyed the type of politics fostered by Hitler, contributing to spread attacks against Jews and ejections within its territory.
Answer and explanation:
<u>The final stanzas of the poem "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" by T. S. Eliot bring a sad and hard conclusion to the poem.</u> The poem as a whole is a pessimistic one. The speaker, Prufrock, is an unsatisfied man both carnally and spiritually. He is a loner, incapable of establishing relationships and connections with other human beings. He does want and wish for it. But even in his imagination, women despise him and criticize the way he looks and acts. He clearly has a self-esteem issue that, instead of being addressed and treated, only grew worse with time. Now it completely prevents him from living a normal life.
<u>The conclusion of the poem is even more pessimistic. The speaker does not believe he will ever be happy. He compares women and the happiness they represent to mermaids. As we know, in Greek mythology, mermaids would sing to sailors with the purpose of enchanting them. Sailors who heard their song would end up drowning. Prufrock thinks he will drown as well, but when reality wakes him up from the mermaid's dream. The mermaids, after all, do not sing for him. He watches himself growing older, stranger, weaker, more coward and less desirable.</u>