In "Things Fall Apart" by Chinua Achebe, the greatest internal conflict Okonkwo has is him being what he considered ideal masculinity. He became known as a great fighter, a wealthy farmer, and a highly esteemed man in his clan, but all of this changes when he is exiled for seven years. He downgrades to sharecropping from his mother's family's land, and he immediately begins planning how to regain his status when he returns to Umuofia. "Okonkwo saw clearly the high esteem in which he would be held, and he saw himself taking the highest title in the land." He feels that his value is attached only to wealth and power.
Answer:
bleak and unfavorable places where typically nothing thrives.
Explanation:
Based on the excerpt, readers can assume that the internment camps are bleak and unfavorable places where typically nothing survives.
This is because, from the conversation, the narrator says "My father says where we're going, they won't grow" when they were talking about packing tomato seeds. So for this reason, the readers can infer that the internment camps are unfavorable and bleak.
C) your welcome oooooooooooooooooo
Answer:
He sat in the front section of a bus.
Explanation:
The correct answer among the choices provided is option B. It is not a difference when it is said that the parliamentary debate is the same as the Lincoln-Douglas debate style. It is because Lincoln-Douglas debate style is one-on-one. Parliamentary debate requires a team.