<em>Answer: In the diary entry from Saturday, June 20, 1942, in Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl, Anne writes that "paper is more patient than man."
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<em>A. Which sentence best analyzes the meaning of her statement?
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<em>B. Anne doesn't want to confide in her diary, but she feels she can't confide in people because they are impatient.
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<em>C. Anne wants to confide in other people, but she finds people less accepting than a page in her diary.
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<em>D. Anne doesn't want to confide in her friends because she thinks they don't have time to listen to her.
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<em>Anne likes confiding in her diary, but she prefers confiding in her friends.
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<em>Question 2
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<em>Part B Which excerpt best supports the answer in Part A?
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<em>"And now I come to the root of the matter, the reason for my starting this diary: it is that I have no such real friend . . . I want this diary itself to be my friend, and I shall call my friend Kitty."
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<em>"I don't want to set down a series of bald facts in a diary like most people do . . ."
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<em>"But it's the same with all my friends, just fun and joking, nothing more."
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<em>"No one will grasp what I'm talking about if I begin my letters to Kitty just out of the blue, so, albeit unwillingly, I will start by sketching in brief the story of my life."</em>
<em>Explanation:</em>
THE ANSWER IS B FOR PT A AND A FOR PART B HOPE THIS HELPED.!! HAVE A GOOD DAY!!!!
Answer:
Allied powers—France, Great Britain, the United States, and the Soviet Union
Latinos play a growing role I America's influence, 53 million Latinos, or 17% of the population and growing, only 34 of the 435. Latinos represent Americas future with an aging white population reaching retirement, Latino youth are many of our future doctors, lawyers, and school teachers. We've seen evidence if this successful in such unexpected places as North Arkansas, where growth in the Latino immigrant population led business and civic leaders to explore how they could harness the talent of this diverse community. hope this helps.
Answer:
Johnson rejected many of the goals of Reconstruction by vetoing bills that would increase the rights of the former slaves.
Explanation:
Andrew Johnson entered presidency upon the death of the abolitionist Abraham Lincoln in 1865. As Lincoln's former Vice President, Johnson was expected to make policies similar to Lincoln's and achieve the goals of Reconstruction. However, once Johnson was in office, he took a different approach to the situation: he failed to make policies that protected the right of newly freed slaves and that kept them safe after the Civil War and failed to regulate the Southern States. Instead, Johnson granted thousands of pardons to white Southerners, wealthy planters and Confederate leaders and allowed some of them to return to power and to have their property back.
<span><span>Equiano was an African writer whose experiences as a slave prompted him to become involved in the British abolition movement.
In his autobiography, Olaudah Equiano writes that he was born in the Eboe province, in the area that is now southern Nigeria. He describes how he was kidnapped with his sister at around the age of 11, sold by local slave traders and shipped across the Atlantic to Barbados and then Virginia.
In the absence of written records it is not certain whether Equiano's description of his early life is accurate. Doubt also stems from the fact that, in later life, he twice listed a birthplace in the Americas.
Apart from the uncertainty about his early years, everything Equiano describes in his extraordinary autobiography can be verified. In Virginia he was sold to a Royal Navy officer, Lieutenant Michael Pascal, who renamed him 'Gustavus Vassa' after the 16th-century Swedish king. Equiano travelled the oceans with Pascal for eight years, during which time he was baptised and learned to read and write.
Pascal then sold Equiano to a ship captain in London, who took him to Montserrat, where he was sold to the prominent merchant Robert King. While working as a deckhand, valet and barber for King, Equiano earned money by trading on the side. In only three years, he made enough money to buy his own freedom. Equiano then spent much of the next 20 years travelling the world, including trips to Turkey and the Arctic.
In 1786 in London, he became involved in the movement to abolish slavery. He was a prominent member of the 'Sons of Africa', a group of 12 black men who campaigned for abolition.
In 1789 he published his autobiography, 'The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano or Gustavus Vassa, the African'. He travelled widely promoting the book, which became immensely popular, helped the abolitionist cause, and made Equiano a wealthy man. It is one of the earliest books published by a black African writer.
In 1792, Equiano married an Englishwoman, Susanna Cullen, and they had two daughters. Equiano died on 31 March 1797.</span><span>
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