Answer:
Before arriving to the United States, Gurung's life was always in danger: "Many of us were tortured and imprisoned. We had no choice but to flee to Nepal to save our lives".
He was from Bhutan but he had to go to Nepali's refugee camps. After twenty years, he decided to move to the United States. In the US, he kept struggling, he couldn't find a job and he didn't speak the language: "But here in the United States, my community continues to struggle. We arrived in the U.S. when the economy was at its lowest point, so we struggle to find jobs. Many of us do not speak English, and lack of education makes it even more difficult for us to learn (...)".
However, Gurung explains that he now helps other refugees to have a successful transition between the place where they come from and the United States and he's very happy about it and about his family.
Explanation:
To complete this exercise, you have to read a text about what Til Gurung said in a Refugee Transitions talk, and then summarize what Gurung's life was like before and after arriving in the United States. In his talk, he explains a little bit about his life and how Refugee Transitions is filling a need in his community.
Answer:
the last one
Explanation:
it uses "than" to compare video news story and a written version of a story
Me , he , we , him, us , his
brainlyst?
Answer: The sentence containing an infinitive phrase is Lisa wants to go quickly.
Explanation:
An infinitive phrase is a group of words, as part of a sentence in most cases, with the purpose of acting like an adverb, a noun or an adjective. This group of words makes use of the infinitive form ( to + verb-go in this case ) so as to express the action.
To express the action, the infinitive applies an affect on an object or a modifier ( adjective or adverb-quickly )
The first option contains an infinitive form but does not have an effect on an object or a modifier.
The last option is a prepositional phrase as it expresses location.
Answer:
The character described below is called Marianne, she is in the book "Sense and Sensibility" by Jane Austen
.
Explanation:
If you've read Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibility, you must have been enchanted by the sisters Marianne and Elinor. The first with an inordinate amount of sensitivity, with a penchant for love poems and melancholic songs, and the second: practical, rational, with a force worthy of reverence.
Marianne is described as romantic and expressive. Marianne's romanticism and impulsiveness are so intense that it can even irritate. That's right, the degree of sensitivity of the character Marianne irritates. Because as you read and know this fragility exposed, you want, like your sister Elinor, that she awakens, that she does not "succumb" to life.
Marianne is described as the type of person who would never question modes and pertinence. He would never stop or stop dying if the cause were noble. Marianne annoys! You warn her: No! And she just can not obey. Because she is committed to her passionate and emotional essence.