Preferably not. unless you are doing research on how brains work in the same way your results could be completely different from a depressed moose to a depressed squirrel to a depressed human
This is perhaps in part due to my pedantry, and inpart due to advancing age
A: terribly: modifies old, an adjective
B: very smart: very modifies smart, an adjective
C; extremely modifies "slow", an adjective again
D: quickly modifies "hid" a verb - this is the correct answer!
There is some info lacking here.
Answer:
It knowing the airmen's fears it enable us to identify on a basic or normal level.
With books that are good, the reader wants to recognize strongly with the characters.
Explanation:
With good books, the reader wants to strongly recognize with the characters, so good writers highlights certain traits they feel will resonate with others.
In Seabiscuit, Hillenbrand made characters strong around the horse who were examples of fears and universal hopes common to most of us.
In the crucible of war, actions are heightened by the see-sawing emotions brought on by death and life experiences.
By understanding the airmen’s fears in greater depth makes us to identify on a very basic level. The airmen are of each on dissimilar but universal in their fears of death and what it means to themselves, their families and comrades.