Internal conflict is conflict with the characters self/in his own mind. Making a hard decision may be an internal conflict.
Another conflict can be external conflict. That is also hard because many characters cannot control something else. External conflict is conflict that is around a character. Something other than the character. An example is a conflict with the weather, (hurricanes, tornado's).
<span>In my opinion, I think external conflict is a main struggle because that character cannot stop that thing easily. In an internal conflict, many control their thoughts/feelings.
(This is my answer from the other question I answered. But I changed it a bit )</span>
Change “digging around” to “to dig in dirt”. Remove “Things”
The answer would be The Statesman's Yearbook.
The reader sees that there is a great deal of external conflict, especially between Lennie and various people such a Curley's wife, whom he ultimately kills accidentally. George, in his trying to take care of Lennie, often intervenes in the "man vs man" conflicts because Lennie's limited abilities causes him to miss the nuances of life among groups. George does have some internal conflict, since he has to decide whether or not to kill Lennie. He makes the decision to "put him out of his misery" which has not happened yet but would be "external" if he had to face the "mob" after Curley's wife's death.
There are multiple answers in mind but this one stick out the most inside of my head
Answer:
It is below.
Explanation:
If there is no involvement in the communities, then no one would get what they want and no one would be able to share their ideas.
I hope this helps. :)