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Winston Churchill is best remembered as the British prime minister whose speeches rallied a nation under a relentless Nazi onslaught in World War II. But few people know that he won the Nobel Prize in Literature — in part for his mastery of speech making.
On May 13, 1940, three days after Germany invaded France, Churchill gave his first speech as prime minister to the House of Commons, a speech that was later broadcast to the public. "I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat," he said, as he helped the country brace for hard times.
"Winston Churchill managed to combine the most magnificent use of English — usually short words, Anglo-Saxon words, Shakespearean," says Andrew Roberts, author of a history of World War II called The Storm of War. "And also this incredibly powerful delivery. And he did it at a time when the world was in such peril from Nazism, that every word mattered."
Answer:
what are you asking or are you not asking anything
The answer for your question is A
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Survior Tree
The Survivor Tree, a one hundred year old American Elm, is the only tree in the surrounding area that survived the bombing. It stands as a beacon of hope, survival, and resiliency. Immediately surrounding the Survivor Tree, small Eastern (Oklahoma) Redbud trees represent the Oklahoma first responders. These responders were the first to the scene. The two remaining trees are the Chinese pistache and the Amur maple. These are non-native trees to Oklahoma representing the rescuers who came from across the nation and world.
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This was because the secret service was worried about Japanese spies trying assassinate the president.
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