Answer:
1. Lines 16, 17, and 18
the needle a worm
laying tiny eggs
that sink into brown cloth.
2. Lines 46 and 47
feeling Brother Khôi’s eyes burn into my scalp
3. Lines 51 and 52
a mother who has become gaunt like bark
Explanation:
In lines 16, 17, and 18 metaphor was used because the needle was indirectly compared to a worm.
In lines 46 and 47, personification was used because the attribute of a living thing - to burn, was assigned to the eyes. Normally, the eyes do not burn. But in this instance, burning was used figuratively.
In lines 51 and 52, simile was used because mother was compared to a bark that has become gaunt. The connector 'like' was used for this direct comparison.
Answer:
Abraham
Explanation:
According to the Torah, Yahweh guided Abraham and his family on a journey to the promised land of Canaan around 4000 years ago. Throughout the year, Abraham and his family keep extending their family trees and populate the area. Which is why there is a conception that Israelis can track their ancestry back to Abraham.
Historians on the other hand have different opinion regarding this conception. They believed that the population process is much complicated since they have to consider the immigration that occurred from middle east and European regions into Israel. So, not all of Israelis might have a direct ancestry to Abraham.
The first people of plateau I think
Prior to the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, The Bill of Rights ( the first 10 Amendments to the Constitution) only applied to the Federal government. This meant that states were not obliged to adopt the Amendments and the laws that came as a result of them.
After the Civil War ended, the Fourteenth Amendment was created and ratified, the Bill of Rights was now applicable not only to federal courts but also to state ones. This meant that citizens were now more protected, as federal and states obligations are the same in most cases.
I'm pretty sure it's C mark me brainliest! sorry if I get it wrong