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Answer: Choice D</h3>
...he that was strongest secured the best place; and few left the trough satisfied
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Explanation:
Frederick Douglass is describing the horrific conditions of what kind of food he ate and the conditions in which he had his meals. At the start of the paragraph, he describes the food itself (a corn meal called Mush). Then later on he describes how the food was served in a very degrading inhumane way (the food being served in a trough; effectively treating them as animals). Shortly after, he goes over how the food was eaten through a variety of means: use of oyster shells, shingles, or bare hands. None of which involves the regular utensils you'd expect such as a spoon.
At the very end of the excerpt, Frederick Douglass mentions that "He that ate the fastest got most; he was strongest secured the best place; and few left the trough satisfied". This effectively means that even though the food itself was horrible, and the conditions degrading, people were still hungry and had no other choice. Also, even the people who were able to eat the most weren't truly/fully fed.
So in short, the last part of the excerpt describes that the slaves weren't fed enough. If we could narrow down the cited evidence as much as possible, the portion that mentions "few left the trough satisfied" is the thing you should focus on.
Answer:
doctors are supposed to do their responsibility to human life
Answer: Once upon a time, there was a wrench bird that housed on a metal tree. The tree was annoyed by the bird after it pooped white balls that hatch into microbirds that were new to the world that were very noisy with their chreep chreep sound. The tree decided to shake to dance to pitch the bird to the house of a human named Smiley. Smiley saw that the bird was sad that had no house to live in so he decided to adopt the bird and its babies. The bird lived cheerly and so did babies. THE END!
I believe the word stories help you wundestand the meaning
Answer:
He is caught stealing bread while the children go hungry. While in hiding, food was always an issue and the three families of the Franks, Van Daan and Dussel stayed together and had little portions.
However, Mrs. Frank catches Mr. Van Daan one night while stealing bread and she gets furious with him while him of being a poor father.