<span>The leader of the camp and the head of Eliezer's tent both take a special interest in children and give them extra food. Eliezer explains that children are traded among homosexuals at the camp. When Eliezer arrives at the camp, it seems empty. As usual, the prisoners shower and are given new clothes. Veteran prisoners tell them that Buna is a good camp and that they should try to avoid being placed in the building unit. The head of Eliezer's tent is a fat and predatory-looking German. His assistant tries to get Eliezer's shoes by offering to put him and his father in the same unit, but Eliezer refuses, even after he offers an extra ration of food.</span>
Answer:
The Maasai are given the gift of cattle
Explanation:
happy to help ya!
Answer:
the door-in-the-face technique.
Explanation:
The door-in-the-face technique refers to a submission method in response to a large request, which the person requested will refuse, so that he or she will be more likely to accept a smaller and more reasonable request. In that respect, Luna's father rejected her first large demand for an expensive flight ticket, and then submitted to his daughter's plea for a cheaper bus ticket.
The correct answer is A. Alternating lines are about the same length and all end with a dash.
Explanation:
In most poems, lines follow a specific structure based on the number of syllables/words and other features such as rhyme or use of punctuation. In the case of the poem presented, there is a fixed structure because at the end of all the lines there is a dash (-) which might be used to replace a punctuation mark such as a comma and to create a pause between verses. Besides this, the length of verses 1 and 3 are similar, as well as the length between verses 2 and 4, which means alternating lines have a similar length based on the number of words and length of these. Thus, the option that best describes the structure is A.
Answer:
///A (im really not sure but i hope this is right)
Explanation: