1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
djyliett [7]
3 years ago
15

Profusely mean the option is in the picture​

English
2 answers:
yulyashka [42]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

abundantly............

Kamila [148]3 years ago
5 0

Answer: The answer is D pls correct me if i'm wrong :)

Explanation:

You might be interested in
HELP PLEASE Who ever gives best answer gets brainliest. ok here it goes.​
Marina CMI [18]

Answer:

D, A, A.

Explanation:

(1). Key sentences state what the passage is about. The sentence, "Plants can grow everywhere" would be the key sentence since it clearly states what the passage is about and has three supporting details to back it up.

(2). The sentence, "There are different kinds of plants" is not a supporting detail because it doesn't support the key sentence.

(3). The passage tells us that plants can grow everywhere such as under the sea, on rocks, and even on trees. The choice, "The places where plants grow" would be the answer to this question.

3 0
2 years ago
Shall we read all the books in passive voice​
Andrei [34K]

Answer:

No u can read any book on active voice tooo

Sometimes we need passive voice too .

4 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
The people of Sighet knew of the Germans. What was their attitude toward them at the time?
gayaneshka [121]

Answer:In 1941, Eliezer, the narrator, is a twelve-year-old boy living in the Transylvanian town of Sighet (then recently annexed to Hungary, now part of Romania). He is the only son in an Orthodox Jewish family that strictly adheres to Jewish tradition and law. His parents are shopkeepers, and his father is highly respected within Sighet’s Jewish community. Eliezer has two older sisters, Hilda and Béa, and a younger sister named Tzipora.

Eliezer studies the Talmud, the Jewish oral law. He also studies the Jewish mystical texts of the Cabbala (often spelled Kabbalah), a somewhat unusual occupation for a teenager, and one that goes against his father’s wishes. Eliezer finds a sensitive and challenging teacher in Moishe the Beadle, a local pauper. Soon, however, the Hungarians expel all foreign Jews, including Moishe. Despite their momentary anger, the Jews of Sighet soon forget about this anti-Semitic act. After several months, having escaped his captors, Moishe returns and tells how the deportation trains were handed over to the Gestapo (German secret police) at the Polish border. There, he explains, the Jews were forced to dig mass graves for themselves and were killed by the Gestapo. The town takes him for a lunatic and refuses to believe his story.

In the spring of 1944, the Hungarian government falls into the hands of the Fascists, and the next day the German armies occupy Hungary. Despite the Jews’ belief that Nazi anti-Semitism would be limited to the capital city, Budapest, the Germans soon move into Sighet. A series of increasingly oppressive measures are forced on the Jews—the community leaders are arrested, Jewish valuables are confiscated, and all Jews are forced to wear yellow stars. Eventually, the Jews are confined to small ghettos, crowded together into narrow streets behind barbed-wire fences.

The Nazis then begin to deport the Jews in increments, and Eliezer’s family is among the last to leave Sighet. They watch as other Jews are crowded into the streets in the hot sun, carrying only what fits in packs on their backs. Eliezer’s family is first herded into another, smaller ghetto. Their former servant, a gentile named Martha, visits them and offers to hide them in her village. Tragically, they decline the offer. A few days later, the Nazis and their henchmen, the Hungarian police, herd the last Jews remaining in Sighet onto cattle cars bound for Auschwitz.

One of the enduring questions that has tormented the Jews of Europe who survived the Holocaust is whether or not they might have been able to escape the Holocaust had they acted more wisely. A shrouded doom hangs behind every word in this first section of Night, in which Wiesel laments the typical human inability to acknowledge the depth of the cruelty of which humans are capable. The Jews of Sighet are unable or unwilling to believe in the horrors of Hitler’s death camps, even though there are many instances in which they have glimpses of what awaits them. Eliezer relates that many Jews do not believe that Hitler really intends to annihilate them, even though he can trace the steps by which the Nazis made life in Hungary increasingly unbearable for the Jews. Furthermore, he painfully details the cruelty with which the Jews are treated during their deportation. He even asks his father to move the family to Palestine and escape whatever is to come, but his father is unwilling to leave Sighet behind. We, as readers whom history has made less naïve than the Jews of Sighet, sense what is to come, how annihilation draws inexorably closer to the Jews, and watch helplessly as the Jews fail to see, or refuse to acknowledge, their fate.

The story of Moishe the Beadle, with which Night opens, is perhaps the most painful example of the Jews’ refusal to believe the depth of Nazi evil. It is also a cautionary tale about the danger of refusing to heed firsthand testimony, a tale that explains the urgency behind Wiesel’s own account. Moishe, who escapes from a Nazi massacre and returns to Sighet to warn the villagers of the truth about the deportations, is treated as a madman. What is crucial for Wiesel is that his own testimony, as a survivor of the Holocaust, not be ignored. Moishe’s example in this section is a reminder that the cost of ignoring witnesses to evil is a recurrence of that evil.

7 0
3 years ago
How can an act of courage reveal a perdon’s true nature
Degger [83]

Answer:

If there the first person to help someone they have courage and are a nice human being but if they are the first ones to push the person needing help out of there way their just self centered and not a good person. I would call them a coward!! Hope this helps if not sorry. This is what I think.

pls mark me brainliest

Explanation:

3 0
3 years ago
why do human have such a strong desire to fly when it is against our nature to do so? three to five paragraph.
lions [1.4K]

Answer:

You will write, I will put a foundation.

Explanation:

Humans like flight because some love the feeling with it, some love the views you get from it and some just love the risk involved with it. When your above the ground you see things from many different perspectives, everything is 10x  better in the air because you don't have things blocking your view.

4 0
3 years ago
Other questions:
  • (1) Do you enjoy being out in the fresh air? (2) Does nature restore your spirits? (3) You might want to consider hiking as a ho
    6·2 answers
  • The movement in fine arts during the latter part of the nineteenth and early part of the 20th centuries that originated in Europ
    14·1 answer
  • Makeup and size of the group are important when dealing with statistics. True False
    5·1 answer
  • How do the authors differ in the way they present the war in “Facing It” and “Ambush”? A. O’Brien describes it in narrative form
    6·2 answers
  • Which quotation from the poem “sonnet in primary colors” by rita dove includes an allusion?
    9·1 answer
  • What is the definition of charade?
    5·1 answer
  • Q27. Among the many fields of science, no matter what turns you on, there are several fields of
    6·1 answer
  • Which type of logical fallacy does the following sentence show?
    8·1 answer
  • The little prince is a famous story about a French pilot who crashes his plane in the Sahara desert
    14·1 answer
  • Explain how the connotation of a word in Emily Dickinson's "A Book" adds to the poem's message.
    12·2 answers
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!