Answer: 1. Liszt focuses on history and geography, neither of which is very interesting to Bruno, but the tutor insists that he learn about "The Fatherland." He wanted him to get his head out of storybooks and into real history.
2. The house would have to be cleaned from top to bottom, the windows washed, the dining-room table stained and varnished, the food ordered, the maid's and butler's uniforms washed and pressed, and the crockery and glasses polished until they sparkled.
3. One day, Bruno goes outside and reads the plaque on the bench near the garden: "Presented on the occasion of the opening of Auschwitz Camp, June nineteen forty" (9.523).
4. Bruno will explore everything that he's been looking at through his window. The woods that lead to the camp with the tall fence, smoke stacks, and people in the striped pajamas.
Explanation:
Answer:
Explanation:
Vitamin C is obtained <u>from</u> citrus fruits.
“from” is used here to refer the place that something comes out of.
<span>r. Her remarks in Act I—about the location of Grover's Corners in the universe—articulate an important theme in the play: if the town is a microcosm, representative of the broader human community and the shared human experience, then this human experience of Grover's Corners lies at the center of a grand structure and is therefore eternal.</span>
Nearby indicates a shift in place (Example: we went around the corner to the nearby deli)
Finally, once, and eventually indicate time.