Yo dijo que es B biblioteca
Answer:
It changes the mood from somebody who is curious about what's written in the diary<em> </em><em>(Mr. Frank)</em> to somebody who is eager to tell a story<em> (Anne Frank). </em>
The author chose to do that <u>in order to let the audience know what it's like to be reading another person's diary from what it's like to write a diary, as in Anne's case.</u> It also allows the audience to know the<em> actual date and setting </em>when Anne started writing the diary.
Explanation:
The question above is related to the drama entitled, "The Diary of Anne Frank."
It can be seen in Line 59 that <em>Mr. Frank </em>started reading Anne's Diary. This was after Miep told him that there were letters and notes in the bundles of paper that she gave him.
As Mr Frank was reading, <u>his voice shifted to Anne's voice</u>. This was the time she talked about his father's business and how her family went into hiding.
In Part I, surviving Mirabal sister Dedé relates the story of how her sisters first came to political awareness. Minerva performs in a play where she portrays the figure of Liberty and aims an imaginary arrow at Trujillo's heart.
•In Part II, the Mirabal sisters become embroiled in the resistance movement attempting to overthrow Trujillo. Patria joins the movement after witnessing a massacre carried out by Trujillo's forces.•Part III ends abruptly as three of the sisters journey to visit two of their husbands, who've been detained in a remote prison. In the epilogue, their brutal deaths are recounted, and Alvarez makes brief mention of the fact that Trujillo is ousted a few years later.
Huckleberry Finn has a deeper connection with Jim than with any other character in the novel. This contrast is especially striking given contemporary attitudes on race; though published after the Civil War, it recreates an antebellum Southern society that was completely organized around slavery. Relationships between white and black people were thought to be inevitably antagonistic, a master-slave relationship and not one of equals. Huck, however, does not see Jim as a servant; rather, he feels a kinship with him. Both are outcasts; Jim because he is a black man in a slave society, Huck because of his family situation. His father is abusive and alcoholic who doesn't care for him, and the two women who sometimes care for him try to change his character. Therefore he feels at odds in society, and has trouble fitting in. This makes him more sympathetic to Jim than to other white people.
Answer:
1 no I thik OK my son...........