The easiest things to write about would be like colours, sports, subjects, hobbies, etc. basically anything you like but don’t stress yourself bc they are opinions, not facts.
<span>(Part A) Inglis admires her family members who fight against apartheid because of the risks they take.
</span><span>(Part B) Inglis lists examples of how her family suffers, including her sister’s imprisonment and her brother's need to hide from the authorities.
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Answer:
the celebratory dinner
Explanation:
the sentence is basically about the dinner, and roast beef & mashed potatoes is what the subject (the celebratory dinner) <em>is.</em>
Answer is A. It develops a shocking and horrifying image of the narrator's experience followed by his attempts to forget what happens.
As the journey goes on, the narrator describes the places he visits as really obscure and sinister, places where he does not want to be. Time drags and every place looks the same, so he unconsciously wants this images to slip out of his memory.
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.