B is certainly the moral answer. When a source is shown to be untrustworthy, citing it only amplifies the problem. It is similar to how fake news stories have become a problem on social media. Often people share them without taking time to confirm they are true.
Answer:
..a warrior protected in this army...
Explanation:
In this sentence lies the explanation of the use of the word warrior.She is not a soldier in real life but she has wars to fight.The last sentence makes it clear that the sort of warrior this girl is will not go to battle but will face every situation she has to in her very difficult life.
Answer:
caesura
Explanation:
all of the options appeared in the poem except for caesura
The place is the business of where her father used to work and the situation is them hiding with another family from the Nazis so they won't be sent to a concentration camp
Answer:
Vera tells the central character, Frampton Nuttel, that three years ago a great tragedy occurred in their family. According to Vera, Mrs. Sappleton's husband and two younger brothers set out for a day of shooting, and did not return. It was concluded that the three, along with their little spaniel, were engulfed in the treacherous bog; their bodies were never found. Vera tells Framton that her aunt, Mrs. Sappleton, speaks frequently about the day the three men and the dog purportedly met their demise, leaving the window through which they exited that day open, as if in expectation of their return. As Vera and Framton sit there by the open window, Vera shudders and tells the visitor that on "quiet evenings like this," she still gets a "creepy feeling that they will all walk in through the window."
Mrs. Sappleton comes in at this point, and, as expected, talks about her husband and brothers, whom she says have gone shooting but will be home soon, coming through the window as is their habit. Framton, who is in a delicate mental state, believes, because of what Vera has told him, that the men in question are dead, and that Mrs. Sappleton is delusional. Disturbed by the ghastly situation, Framton becomes completely unnerved when Mr. Sappleton, the two other men, and the spaniel do indeed appear at the window, and he bolts off in terror. Vera, of course, has misled Framton for her own amusement, and when the family wonders why their visitor has left so pricipitously, she dissembles further, saying that he was most likely afraid of the dog.