Answer:
1. I wanted to sink right through the pavement.
2. I didn't want them laughing at Grandpa.
3. I stood up to take the bag, somehow knowing I should.
4. [I] put the sacred sage in my medicine bag.
Explanation:
In all of his writings, Elie wiesel always choose memoir/fiction as his genre.
Including the fact that he based it on his own life (for those who don't know, Elie wiesel is a survivor of holocaust and write books about it), it helped people empathize and can easily accept his point of view toward the incident.
Answer:
Professor Sherry Turkle's little "sips" of online connection is a metaphor that describes the little "pieces" of conversation that we are having by using technological devices.
Explanation:
MIT Professor, Sherry Turkle, PhD, and a licensed clinical psychologist, with a joint doctorate in sociology and psychology, notes that people are now avoiding the necessary conversations that we ought to be having with one another because we are "plugged-in" to various technological devices. In her write-up in the New York Times of April 21, 2012 titled "The Flight from Conversation," Professor Sherry Turkle urges people not to "sacrifice conversation for mere connection." Since we are technology-enabled, she declares that we should make the best use of it to remain conversationally connected to others whether they are near or far, but must still bring ourselves to enjoy the indispensable face-to-face conversations with our fellow human beings.
Answer:
"And for Leo, and other adventure seekers like him, soaring through the skies in an aircraft powered only by the invisible forces of nature comes as close as one can get to realizing that dream."
Answer:
is not as eager to get on a boat.
Explanation:
In the beginning of the sentence, it explained what the person was feeling so I thought it would make more sense to see what the other person was feeling.