Answer:
Explanation:
lines 1-19: Wiesel wants to grab the reader's attention and urge them to read about the struggles Jews went through during the Holocaust.
lines 4-6: "Here heaven and earth are on fire" was repeated throughout the speech. The impact of it was to describe how it felt and gives a reader a glimpse at the horrific things that happened in those champers.
Lines 25-33: "Kingdom of eternal night" and "Kingdom of darkness" are two different phrases that give off the same vibe. Weisel was trying to convey the darkness Jews experienced hence "eternal night."
Lines 37-39: Weisel used the word blasphemy to express the irony and hypocrisy of the killers.
Lines 51-60: Weisel described the inhumane and disgustingly horrifying things Jews went through by using the pathos persuasive technique to appeal to the reader's emotions.
Lines 61-64: One element I can think of is truth. The world will never be the same after the holocaust and the damages that were caused by it. Not only the damages done to the environment but also the damage it caused to people all over the world, especially Jews.
I hope I helped. I struggled on the question for lines 37-39 so I apologize in advance if it's wrong.
Clarification:
I found the complete instructions for the exercise online:
"Read the paragraph. Click or tap Two underlined words that are synonyms."
Answer:
B and C: requirement and obligation.
Explanation:
To complete the exercise, you have to select the words that are synonyms. The correct answers are<u> "requirement" and "obligation"</u> because a requirement in a job offer is something that is required, that is needed, to get the job, so it is a synonym to obligation, something you are demanded to complete or to accomplish.
Answer:
I will drive the Volkswagen!
Explanation:
Noun phrase is constructed
Answer:
Like lines, there is no set length to a stanza or an insistence that all stanzas within a poem need be the same length. However, there are names for stanzas of certain lengths: two-line stanzas are couplets; three-lines, tercets; four-lines, quatrains.
Explanation: