The sentence 'I wanted it' has four morphemes. Morpheme is defined as a meaningful morphological unit of a language that can not be further divided; it is the smallest meaningful unit of a language. A morpheme may or may not stand alone. A morpheme that is standing alone is called root while that that can not stand alone is called 'affix'. Every word is made up of one or more morphemes. The morphemes in the sentence given above are: I, want, ed, it.
I believe its B just cause its the character speaking and the narrator explaining what the character is doing should be spoken in a lower voice. hope it helps i tried :-:
Assuming that you are referring to Elie Wiesel and his memoir “Night,” here is the best answer I can provide for you, given the lack of context in your question. I hope this helps somehow:
At the beginning of his memoir after the Jews in his hometown were forced out of their homes and into ghettos by German Nazis, Wiesel states how those imprisoned within the walls of the ghetto failed to acknowledge the genuine terror of their situation and felt comfort and solidarity with the acknowledgment that they were safe from harm from the outside world, or those outside the ghetto, which in turn, ended up being proven false; however, the Jews forced themselves to believe in their deluded fabrication rather than face the sorrowful reality that was now and would soon become the rest of their life. "The ghetto was ruled by neither German nor Jew; it was ruled by delusion.” (Wiesel 11.) Had those imprisoned in the ghettos not been so brainwashed by their falsified delusion that life was better in the ghetto, they could have tried to escape or avoid ending up in it when they had the opportunity to do so.
<span>I'd go with these four >>>
3. Religion
5. The environment
7. Learning
8. Other people</span>
C. Stereotyping
Since they are saying "teenagers" they are building a stereotypical reference to teenagers and how they never listen...Hope this makes sense!