The right answer for the question that is being asked and shown above is that: "<span>Actually from day to day he perceived things with less and less clarity, even those a short distance away: the hospital across the street, the all too frequent sight of which he had previously cursed..."</span>
The answer is C.
In Scrooge's London, prisons and workhouses are two
places that most poor people are very happy to go to when
they are in need of basic necessities.
Answer:
Hitler youth
In his book Mein Kampf, written in the 1920s, Hitler said, “Whoever has the youth has the future.” Even before they came to power in 1933, Nazi leaders had begun to organize groups that would train young people according to Nazi principles. By 1936, all “Aryan” children in Germany over the age of six were required to join a Nazi youth group. At ten, boys were initiated into the Jungvolk (Young People), and at 14 they were promoted to the Hitler Youth. Their sisters joined the Jungmädel (Young Girls) and were later promoted to the League of German Girls. Hitler hoped that “These young people will learn nothing else but how to think German and act German. . . . And they will never be free again, not in their whole lives.”
Although membership in the Hitler Youth organizations was compulsory, many young people did not have to be forced to join. In fact, they were eager to do so, drawn by the sense of belonging and importance they felt as members of these groups. In 1938, a boy named Hans Wolf wrote a story about his experiences in the Hitler Youth that was published in a school textbook. The story was called “Comradeship.”
1. names something you cannot see or touch
2. a verb's time of action
3. arrangement of verb forms by tense, voice, mood, person, and number
4. a verb that functions as an adjective
5. contains two or more main clauses
6. specific noun to which a pronoun refers
These are the answers:
1.<span>Abstract Noun
</span>2.<span>Tense
</span>3. <span>Conjugation
4.</span><span>Participle
</span>5.<span>Compound Sentence
6.</span><span>Antecedent </span>