Answer:
B) "She was young, with a fair, calm face, whose lines bespoke repression and even a certain strength" (para
8).
E) "There was a feverish triumph in her eyes, and she carried herself unwittingly like a goddess of Victory"
(para. 23).
Explanation:
The detail(s) from the text that best supports the inference that all marriages of the late 19th century, even happy ones, were somewhat oppressive is option B and E.
This is because, based on the story, Louise is sad that her husband has died but she is relieved that she would no longer be oppressed and is now truly free.
They started evacuating because they knew that the countries that made up the Allies group were advancing into Nazi-dominated territory.
We can arrive at this answer in the following way:
- During World War II, the Allies group was formed by England, USA, Russia, France, and China.
- That group wished to fight Germany, consequently, expel them from the dominated territories and finalize the concentration camps.
- With the advance of the Allies, the Germans had to retreat and abandon the concentration camps, for fear of being invaded and that the soldiers would be arrested.
As the Nazi concentration camps involved a lot of war crimes, the Germans knew that they would be tried very violently by the Allies and so they decided to evacuate the camps and destroy the evidence that they had been there.
More information:
brainly.com/question/19106581?referrer=searchResults
A few years ago I had an English teacher that encouraged "The Oreo Method"; it compares effective constructive criticism to an Oreo cookie.
The filling in the middle was the constructive criticism, but before and after that, you offer positive feedback for the writer.
Pretty self explanatory:
1. Provide one piece of positive feedback first and linger on it for a couple sentences; let them know how important that "thing" is and, in a way, praise them for doing it. This primes them to accept your feedback cause they know how thoroughly you've read and analyzed their work.
2. Offer any and all of the constructive criticism you have; stay subtle and be concise with all your feedback.
3. Offer more positive feedback, as many good things as you can come up with.
By submerging the constructive criticism between positive feedback, you keep their hopes up while still thoroughly conveying weak spots in their work.
I hope this kinda made sense; it's a very self explanatory idea so I had trouble elaborating on it.
Answer:
wants to see who is there
Explanation: