I think your going to have to have a visual for this and also what are the words, what are the words? also why are there Rescued words.
Answer:
I'd go with the first option, because if you are writing a first-person you are using the word I a lot. and that gets kind of boring.
It helps me understand the idea of sharing to them when he says that they had to share in order to survive.
Image result for What moral lesson do we take from the author’s grandfather in the story?
The family was so fed up with his activities that the grandfather decided to return Toto back to the Tonga driver. Hence, the moral of the story is that one must maintain courtesy
You have to be more specific
Answer:
A truly horrifying look at the aftermath of a nuclear war. The sole survivor seems to be the poor starving and diseased dog. The house, automated, continues telling the time and anniversaries, but none except the dying dog is there to hear. As depressing as it was, it had a tremendous impact on me, so that 40 years after I read it, when the Navy wanted to base nuclear weapons within less than a mile of my home (at a base the 9/11 terrorists had on their list of potential targets), I organized the opposition, which ultimately convinced the Navy not to build the base.
Explanation:
Answer:
11. (E) believed that the poor were happy with their status
12. (C) making the wealthy feel guilt for their relative affluence