Answer:
Gender-based violence (GBV) is violence directed against a person because of that person's gender or violence that affects persons of a particular gender disproportionately.
Explanation:
<em>H</em><em>O</em><em>P</em><em>E</em><em> </em><em>T</em><em>H</em><em>I</em><em>S</em><em> </em><em>H</em><em>E</em><em>L</em><em>P</em><em>S</em><em> </em><em>A</em><em>N</em><em>D</em><em> </em><em>H</em><em>A</em><em>V</em><em>E</em><em> </em><em>A</em><em> </em><em>N</em><em>I</em><em>C</em><em>E</em><em> </em><em>D</em><em>A</em><em>Y</em><em> </em><em><</em><em>3</em>
I think the answer is <u>D</u>, because no other answer makes as much sense.
Answer:
A. "horror bristling round the head”
Explanation:
The given question refers to the poem <em>A Child's Nightmare </em>written by Robert Graves.
The poem begins with some kind of nightmarish creature scaring the narrator when he was a child in his nursery, and then that same creature leaping on him <em>again from the clank of a night train.</em> This is in fact a night train that transported soldiers during the war. From this moment the war imagery begins. Lines <em>when I'm shot through heart and head</em> and <em>nor the stretcher-bearer's cry </em>are from this part of the poem, as well. The only line that is not an example of war imagery as it is from the first part of the poem is line A: <em>horror bristling round the head.</em>
(I don't know if i should put it in full sentences so I'm not.)
Line 1- Home
Line 2- Safe, Secure
Line 3- still, active, loving
Line 4- windows, doors, rooms, people
Line 5- moving, playing, talking
Line 6- helpless, protective
Line 7- outside
(I tried. I would have done better if I understood how to do it better. but that's what I came up with. Hope it's good. I am a poet so yeah.)