Answer:Which excerpt from "The Enigma Machine" supports the claim that German soldiers accidentally helped the Allies figure out the Enigma codes? With the right settings, the recipient only needed to type in the encrypted text and the message would light up in plain text. To use the Enigma machine, an operator typed a message into the machine, which would be scrambled by three rotors. . . The Polish intelligence developed the "bomba", a complicated system of wires and rotors to scan and decode messages within hours. Typing in messages was a boring task, so operators took shortcuts, like choosing three letters in a row or other simple, predictable patterns.
Explanation:
Google that man, you don't need to use brainly, look for synonyms of critical, but that info should be in the defenition.
Alright so I never actually read the book so please take this with a grain of salt. From what I have just read it seems that Gogol comes to accept his non-American side and appreciate his Indian-American identity. I'm not sure why he comes to terms with it, but apparently he does. In the ending he sits down and reads the book his dad gives him by Nikolai Gogol. So yes, I think he does accept his name. However I strongly encourage you to verify that if you have the book. I hope this helped :)