Implied (or implicit) textual evidence is suggested but not directly stated. When a reader comes across implied textual evidence, they have to:
put together details in the text to draw a conclusion and make educated guesses.
Reading between the lines is very vague, but you do have to infer (or draw a conclusion) with this technique.
Finding direct statements in the text that leave no room for doubt is explicit evidence (directly stated). This is the only one I would not mark.
Answer:
A
Explanation:
"Yes, she has pity on the poor orphan. But alas! I am subjected to my brother, who embitters my life"; this reveals that Nina is controlling.
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Hi UWU ;)
Answer with Explanation:
The American soldiers were<em> astonished</em> to see the emaciated condition of the people in the Nazi concentration camps. They couldn't imagine how the people survived in an area overwhelmed by <em>diseases, corpses and lack of food and water.</em> Thousands of people were kept in this kind of brutal condition. <u>They couldn't contain the Nazi atrocities</u> and immediately started helping the victims by aiding them with food, clothing and shelter. The horrors they encountered were too overpowering and out-of-this-world. They were so enraged that they executed the German guards after the liberation.