Answer:
Aphorism
Explanation:
Anagram is a word, phrase, or name formed by rearranging the letters of another. I don't think this is it because they is no words that were rearranged.
Aphorism is a pithy observation that contains a general truth. This could be true!
Analogy is a comparison between two things. This is not it because there are not two things being compared.
Allusion is an expression designed to call something to mind without mentioning it explicitly; an indirect or passing reference. This is not it because this sentence is explicit meaning it is very straight foward.
Out of all four of those... I would go with Aphorism.
I'm wondering if the sentence has a typo or it is really written as: The most amazing vacations are <u>to</u> places with...
Most sentences don't have that "to" in that part of the sentence or have it at all.
If that is the problem, then it looks like your question can be answered!
What I found on the interenet: Verbs have three moods—indicative, imperative, and subjunctive.
Examples of sentences with verbs having indicative mood:
I want a chocolate ice cream cone.
Atlanta is the capital of Georgia.
Coconut tastes funny.
Are you going to the party?
I suggest you do an essay on an important trip/event that happened in your life. But really emphasize what happened. So as an indicative essay, <u>show</u> the reader what you are experiencing.
Answer:
It shows how enslaved people were exposed to the outside elements and weather.
Explanation:
"Sugar Changed the World" by arc Aronson and Marina Budhos gave an insight into how the spices that we daily use came about. Particularly, the history of sugar that almost everyone can't stay without is traced in this narrative where they provide the 'journey' of how sugar came to be.
As found in the excerpt from the book, the narrator reveals that the slaves did not have a time of rest. Even after their work is done for the day, there is no respite at home, for their houses were in the open and thus, made them vulnerable to diseases. Likewise, the photo by V. C. Vulto shows enslaved people's huts with <em>"no doors and are built on sandy, open ground with no trees nearby".</em>
Thus, the <u>image helps the readers understand the conditions of the slaves, exposed to the outside elements and weather.</u>