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It is only possible to know the main ideas about Mandela's personality after reading the text. However, we can see that in order to talk about personality, qualities and mandela traits, the author will need to describe it, forming a highly descriptive excerpt. Descriptive texts, have a large number of adjectives, which are words that can characterize something or someone. Therefore, in order for you to be able to answer this question, you must first read the text and identify the moments when the author is using many adjectives to present Mandela. Among these adjectives can be presented words like "calm," "responsible," "friendly," "concentrated," "silent," among others.
Answer:
when they were going to fight man to beast
Explanation:
At first, Miri keeps getting into trouble for talking back, even costing the other girls a visit home when she talks back to Tutor Olana (which makes everyone hate her). The only person who seems willing to talk to Miri is Britta, a girl who just moved to Mount Eskel from the lowlands (after her parents died) and is shunned by the other girls because they assume that she thinks she's better than them.
After some time though, Miri starts to excel at her lessons. She finds that she loves to read and spends all of her free time in the classroom going through Tutor Olana's books and reading about the history of Danland. She also starts to figure out how to use quarry-speech—the way that villagers communicate with each other silently when they're working in the quarries.
She often hears the other girls—especially an older girl named Katar—talking about how annoying she is, but Miri ignores them and continues to excel in her lessons. When it comes time for spring holiday, Tutor Olana springs an exam on the girls and says that only the girls who pass will be able to go home. Miri and Katar pass, but Miri thinks that it's unfair for the other girls to have to stay behind, so she uses quarry-speech to tell them all to run, and they scamper back to the village even though Tutor Olana protests.
The short answer is because the whole country is against him.
The longer one is that he has no one left: he killed his advisor, all of his
servants saw what he became while everyone else also found out about his
conspiracies and plots. On top of that even his wife killed herself. So, everyone
deserted him and those who could have stood by him are dead.
<span>“You’re buying sorrow that
can’t talk” means that the seller is experiencing hardships and that selling
his possessions is similar to selling his life. </span>
<span>
</span>
<span>In the book’s context, it
depicts the bitterness of the farmers towards the people who are purchasing his
possessions at such a cheap price – lower than how much he had bought them for –
in a time when the people should have been showing their support to each other.</span>