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The main idea or theme of the story, "The Girl Who Drank the Moon" written by Kelly Barnhill, is standing up ffor someone dear to you even if it means letting go of your comfort zone. It also talks about blind allegeiance and oppression.
The best part is probably the part where the mothers of the protectorate <span>begin to remember the children they sacrificed to the witch, because you realize that the people making the decisions in the Protectorate are mostly men.</span>
Answer:
you cold write one about your height or age or background
A. "When she ... lived there."
This line only defines a specific detail about how the special agent survived through a fake name as a spy. No central theme is described through this sentence.
B. "Baissac’s goal ... resistance groups."
This statement provides the agent’s motive and the way she enacted the task provided. However, that does not completely cover everything in the passage.
C. "Baissac did ... her tasks."
Significant work is not specific, and Normandy and traveling by a bicycle are smaller and irrelevant details, not the big picture that should be concluded from this passage.
D. "As a ... German troops."
This is the statement that definitely defines the central idea of the excerpt. When we break this line into sections, we can see that it illustrates that she performed multiple essential tasks when appointed in Normandy. The phrase “sometimes dangerous tasks” describes the critical nature of the job she handled in there. And, also the opposition (German troops) is clearly mentioned in this sentence which helps to convey the idea very clearly.
<span>The word choice suggests
that the narrator sensed a disturbing feeling from the wallpaper figure’s
movements. The narrator has distinguished the pattern to be that of a woman
wanting to be free. She related herself with this woman and believed that she
is also trapped.</span>