The answer to these questions are A for question 1 and A for question 2
The first answer is...
<span>My guess is that it's something very large that could be made to fall on us and crush us.
</span> The second answer to the second part is...
<span>I'm not leaving! Let them try and make me!
The answer to the third part and the third question is...
</span><span>I have to admit I just don't know what we should do.
The answer to question fourth which is the fourth part is...
</span><span>He put his clothes and shoes back on.</span>
<span>B.) "diseased moral character" because that's the only one that makes sense.</span>
Answer:
<h3>C. to show that Lohitai’s struggles were a universal experience for most refugees
.</h3>
Explanation:
- The accounts of Felix Lohitai's experiences help the readers to understand the hardships and struggles that Lohitai underwent in order to move into America from a war-torn country.
- The interview editor has included summaries of some of the events in Lohitai's life to show that Lohitai’s struggles <u>were a universal experience for most refugees
.</u>
- Most refugees who avail asylum and shelter in other countries find it hard to acquire full-fledged citizenship even after many years of trying. The interview reminds us how Lohitia, after finally getting to move into US, still struggled really hard to get citizenship in the country.
- It brings out the universal experience that most refugees face after moving into a host country, the struggle of acquiring citizenship.
<span>The correct answer is ‘he does nothing’. Wiesel wishes he had done something but instead he actually does not react or move when the Roma man, who is forced into obeying the Germans, hits Wiesel’s father in the concentration camp.</span>