<span>Adventure
is seeking a ‘greater perhaps’. Something unknown but gives you the energy to pursue
going for it. It is a connection between your free-spirited soul and a growing magnet
of place somewhere that fits perfectly to your ideal journey. It is unknown and
scary but it gives you the feel of security and contentment. It gives you that
vibrant energy to pursue whatever is waiting out there, waiting for your
reaping and sowing. Adventure therefore is happiness, the happiness in seeing
yourself being genuinely happy.</span>
Some camps were liberated by the Soviet Union and others by the United States. A famous camp, Auschwitz was liberated by the Soviet Union.
Answer:
Answer 4:
Explanation:
Europeans begin making it and flood the market, making wampum lose its value
This question is missing the answer choices. I have found them online. Since the passage is the same, I will omit it:
What technique does the author use to build suspense in the excerpt?
A. word choice
B. quickening the pace of the story
C. intentionally omitting setting details
D. making the outcome of events uncertain
Answer:
The technique the author uses to build suspense is:
C. intentionally omitting setting details
Explanation:
The setting of a story is the place where and the time when the story happens. When an author wishes to make the setting clear, he will give out details and descriptions to help readers visualize it.
<u>However, that is not what happens in the excerpt we are analyzing here. The author intentionally leaves out details to build suspense. He does not offer a description of the museum and, most importantly, of the objects inside the museum. What are the "hulking objects" he mentions? Mummies? Old statues? What do they look like? We do not know. All we know is that they cast long shadows and stretch across the floor. By describing them so poorly, the author creates suspense, leaving readers wondering about these objects and their role in the story.</u>