Answer:
One day my family and I went to Savannah Georgia for a vacation. We stayed in a good hotel and ate delicious food. My favorite part of the whole vacation was the gigantic candy shop that was right down the road from our hotel, I ate so much candy I thought I would burst! They had candy from all over the world, even chocolate-covered crickets. After eating way too much taffy and chocolate I was feeling sick to my stomach, so my mother took me to Walmart to get some medication to help get rid of nausea. While we were walking I was not paying attention to where I was walking because I was reminiscing on all the delicious candy, before I knew it I had walked straight into a trash can! The trash went everywhere and I was so embarrassed that I left the store without getting anything for my stomach. I learned two lessons that day, one, to not eat so much candy at once, and two, always watch where your walking!
Explanation:
Answer: The Answer is D Wiesel ends his speech with several rhetorical questions to leave the audience with something to think about.
Answer:
In the Introduction Paragraph
NEVER EVER EVER. . .
bluntly announce the essay's intent ("In this essay I will...),
make unreasonable statements,
apologize for the material that is being written ("In my humble opinion..."),
go into a detailed account of the writing,
include random information that has nothing to do with the essay,
use an encyclopedia or dictionary definition ("According to Webster's...), and
dilly-dally. Get to it. Move confidently into the essay.Explanation:
Answer:
Obligation
Explanation:
that that would be my best guess