Answer:
The great depression affected Americans by leaving many unemployed, which caused widespread poverty and homelessness. This also caused families to be separated while looking for jobs. Suffering from droughts in the Midwest, farmers were unable to pay for their settlements and leave. The New Deal affected mostly Native Americans. The 1887 Dawes Act had torn apart the Native's tribal lands and John Collier, the New Deals Commissioner of Indian Affairs knew the Dawes Act at the time, would leave the Natives landless . To prevent this from happening, Collier developed the Indian New Deal.
Answer:
Wait a second !
Explanation:
because it is an order your given
The Shakespeare Stealer is a 1998 historical fiction novel by Gary Blackwood. Taking place in the Elizabethan-era England, it recounts the story of Widge, an orphan whose master sends him to steal Hamlet from The Lord Chamberlain's Men. If we skip the opening setting of Mistress MacGregor's orphanage, then the three settings of The Shakespeare Stealer are the rectory in "the nearby hamlet of Berwick"; the home of Mrs. and Dr. Timothy Bright, a medical practitioner who had studied at Cambridge and who was also the rector of Berwick; Simon Bass's home in Leicester; and the city on the Thames, London City, home of the Globe Theatre.
Answer:
playing/ you don't change anything for this one
surveyed/ nothing here either
swayed/ nope don't change anything
supplied/ drop the y and change it to an i- just like a little song and you'll remember it easily
Explanation:
Answer:
Explanation:
Frau Hermann, the mayor's wife, is the kind woman who gifted Liesel a journal to write down her own stories. This journal became what is known as the "The Book Thief".
Frau Hermann allows Liesel to enter into the library and let's her read the books. Though she caught Liesel stealing a book from library at the beginning, she was kind enough to forgive her and let her use the library.
Liesel who actually came to pick up and drop off the laundry at Hermann thought that the mayor's wife enjoyed at other's sufferings. However, as they get to know each other while reading and talking in the library, they become like mother and daughter. Liesel gets to understand how lonely and grievous Mrs.Hermann is after her son's death in the war. In fact, Mrs.Hermann takes Liesel into her home after her parents' death.