1. everyday I study at the library, which is down the street, for a few hours
At first, Miri keeps getting into trouble for talking back, even costing the other girls a visit home when she talks back to Tutor Olana (which makes everyone hate her). The only person who seems willing to talk to Miri is Britta, a girl who just moved to Mount Eskel from the lowlands (after her parents died) and is shunned by the other girls because they assume that she thinks she's better than them.
After some time though, Miri starts to excel at her lessons. She finds that she loves to read and spends all of her free time in the classroom going through Tutor Olana's books and reading about the history of Danland. She also starts to figure out how to use quarry-speech—the way that villagers communicate with each other silently when they're working in the quarries.
She often hears the other girls—especially an older girl named Katar—talking about how annoying she is, but Miri ignores them and continues to excel in her lessons. When it comes time for spring holiday, Tutor Olana springs an exam on the girls and says that only the girls who pass will be able to go home. Miri and Katar pass, but Miri thinks that it's unfair for the other girls to have to stay behind, so she uses quarry-speech to tell them all to run, and they scamper back to the village even though Tutor Olana protests.
Answer:
<h2>TWO laws/legislation that protect citizens against the</h2><h2>specific human right violation</h2>
<h3>This article reflects on the position of two acts: the Domestic Violence Act No 116 of 1998 and Criminal Law (Sexual Offense and Related Matters) Act No 32 of 2007. Both are framed to protect women against all forms of violence.</h3>
<h2>TWO ways in which the above law protects citizens against human right violation </h2>
<h3>1.Protection of human rights act 1993 : declares the rights pertaining to life, equality, liberty and dignity of an individual that is guarenteered by the constitution of india. </h3><h3>2.The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) declared by the United nations General assembly in the year 1948.</h3>
<h2>discussions, projects, carnpaigns, and events support victims of human right violations</h2>
<h3>Discussion, projects, campaigns and events provide a supportive platform to the victims of human right violations not only by spreading awareness and letting people know about it, but also by giving them a platform to report their grievances and get the support of the common mass.</h3>
<h2>views on the law, the citizen and community</h2><h2>Can protect and support victims of human rights violations.</h2>
<h3>On the support of victims of human rights violation, the law should clearly state and express the repercussions of violating human rights. The community can mobilize and make aware the people of their rights and also allow any victim of human rights violations to face the law and seek justice.</h3>
Here is your answer mate
A I think I did this last yr n I had the answers in my book
The figurative language being used in the passage is an
example of Jargon. It is because based on the passage, the priest made use of
religious terms in his everyday speaking habit that made it to be hard for a
normal person to do so without any religious background in which Jargon is
being defined as a characteristic language in which is used by a particular or
specific group.