Answer:
D. It's obvious that puppy loves its ball.
Good luck in your studies!
Answer: an invasion of a castle.
Explanation: "They enter my castle wall!"
I hope this helps :)
Answer:
The statement that best summarizes the difference between these two ads is They have different appeals.
Explanation:
The ad from 1971 that was widely known as "The Crying Indian" was part of a campaign that has the purpose of making people aware of pollution and that they can do something to fix it, the appeal was emotional, while the campaign that they launched in 2013 add something more to it, they added a proposal so now besides being emotional it also has a sense of logic in it.
In the story, a family of white people is worried about security. Riots occur in the city, in "coloured neighbourhoods", even black maids have been attacked by thieves . So, the mother and son notice that some neighbours have placed a series of jagged metal wires on top of the gate and they decide to do the same.
One night, the mother tells her son a bedtime story about a prince who climbs through a bush of thorns to bring Sleeping Beauty back to life. The next day, the boy recognizes the jagged swire on the wall as representative of his own bush, and he attempts to climb them in an attempt to duplicate what the prince did. The boy becomes tangled in the metal coil, cut and stabbed and torn . As he struggles and screams in agonizing pain, he becomes further trapped in the metal wire and he finally dies.
Answer:
So that the Dutch people would always remember the Nazi occupation and learn from their history.
Explanation:
Nazi Germany invaded a neutral Netherlands in World War II on 10 May 1940, and initially ruled them with a velvet glove but later changed their stance and started persecuting Dutch Jews, hunting and killing them.
The Germans increased the tax they demanded from Netherlands as the war intensified which made standard of living in Netherlands drop drastically. There were pockets of local resistance to the Nazi occupation which later increased.
After the war when Germany was defeated, the Dutch launched operation Black Tulip and deported every person with a German passport and tried people suspected of helping the Nazis.
This is the history the Dutch minister of education is keen for the Dutch people not to forget.