Answer:
bunnies are creatures tht can grow up to 20pounds and it needs a lot of space. Bunnies needs certain food. And people doest realize that bunnies are very hard to take care of.
Explanation:
That's what I think Abt it
Answer:
This sentence is complex.
Explanation:
Wednesday, 18 May, 2022
Time - 2:47 PM
Dear Diary,
Today, Something unexpected happened in my life that I never thought of. I have lost a very good friend of mine because he wasn't good at all. This thing is about the time when I and my friend went to the canteen of our school, We were hungry so I gave some to my friend to buy some food from the canteen. He went there and asked the uncle for the foodstuff. He saw that the uncle was new in our school and It was his first day in our school. That Uncle was very old and therefore he wasn't able to remember things clearly, Canteen was crowded and uncle wasn't able to handle that crowd but still, he was trying. While my friend was buying food, suddenly a girl came and started asking for her stuff. Uncle was busy giving her the demanded things, therefore, he forgot to take money from my friend. My friend took advantage of it and went back without giving him the money. He came to me and gave me the food along with the money. I was confused that how he got food without giving the money. He told everything to me and was laughing at the point. I turned really sad as well as angry at his dishonesty. I didn't expect this from him, I went back to the canteen and gave the money to that Uncle and said sorry to him. Then I told my friend that I thought that he was very good and honest but after this, I can say that I was completely wrong at that point. I'm feeling very sad now because he was a very good friend of mine, but because of his dishonesty I cannot be his friend anymore, I used to think wrong about him but now I have known everything. I'm feeling good as well because I'm not a friend of a dishonest person anymore.
Yours Truly,
[Your Name]
Watching the scene performed was a completely different experience from reading it. The performance emphasizes the body language and facial expressions of the actors as a means of conveying meaning. These elements are missing from the text of the scene and must be imagined by the reader.
Literature and the Holocaust have a complicated relationship. This isn't to say, of course, that the pairing isn't a fruitful one—the Holocaust has influenced, if not defined, nearly every Jewish writer since, from Saul Bellow to Jonathan Safran Foer, and many non-Jews besides, like W.G. Sebald and Jorge Semprun. Still, literature qua art—innately concerned with representation and appropriation—seemingly stands opposed to the immutability of the Holocaust and our oversized obligations to its memory. Good literature makes artistic demands, flexes and contorts narratives, resists limpid morality, compromises reality's details. Regarding the Holocaust, this seems unconscionable, even blasphemous. The horrors of Auschwitz and Buchenwald need no artistic amplification.