Answer:
When she arrived in Auschwitz:
Anne got a typical Auschwitz prisoner's diet: 200 calories a day. This would certainly cause death by starvation.
Anne was housed in a typical Auschwitz barrack filled with lice. This would certainly cause death by typhus.
When she arrived in Bergen Belsen:
Little food, water, or medicine was provided. Shelter was in rickety tents in a muddy field. This would certainly cause death by exposure.
Q: Who killed Anne?
A: The camp administration of Auschwitz and Bergen Belsen killed her. They encarcerated her in conditions that would inevitably cause her death
Addressing her diary entries to an imaginary friend she called Kitty, Anne Frank wrote about life in hiding, including her impressions of the other inhabitants of the Secret Annex, her feelings of loneliness and her frustration over the lack of privacy.
Explanation:
Dxddy_Amiii ~
for your question on that other question
Thoreau means when he says the line “as for work, we haven’t any of any consequence” is all work that we do is trivial and meaningless. He also means that there is not any work of importance, it is all trivial and meaningless. Henry David Thoreau is an essayist, historian, surveyor, naturalist, tax resister, philosopher, and poet.


Irony can be tough to write because first you have to notice something ironic to write about a situation, which is a kind of insight. That’s also why it’s a fairly impressive writing technique. So the trick is not to practice writing irony but to practice noticing it. Look around you every day, and you will see plenty of ways in which ordinary expectations are contradicted by what happens in the real, unpredictable world.As you look around for irony, take care to avoid the pitfall of confusing irony with coincidence. Often coincidences are ironic, and often they are not. Think of it this way: a coincidence would be if firemen, on the way home from putting out a fire, suddenly got called back out to fight another one. Irony would be if their fire truck caught on fire. The latter violates our expectations about fire trucks, whereas the former is just an unfortunate (but not necessarily unexpected) turn of events.
Another way of putting it is this: coincidence is a relationship between facts (e.g. Fire 1 and Fire 2), whereas irony is a relationship between a fact and an expectation and how they contradict each other.
When to use irony
Irony belongs more in creative writing than in formal essays. It’s a great way of getting a reader engaged in a story, since it sets up expectations and then provokes an emotional response. It also makes a story feel more lifelike, since having our expectations violated is a universal experience. And, of course, humor is always valuable in creative writing.
Verbal irony is also useful in creative writing,
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Simile. A simile compares two things or more using the word like or as.
A metaphor compares two or more things, but does not use the word like or as.
Hope this helps!