Mostly he babbled instructions to a tree, thinking it was his assistant Percy Weasley, but then, his Imperius curse wearing off, he stammered that he has to see Dumbledore. (GoF28 'The Madness of Mr. Crouch', pp. 553-556). I hope my answer has come to your help. God bless and have a nice day ahead!
Answer: Fabio's attitude changed because he'd be in the parade.
Explanation: Fabio is excited to be able to participate in the parade. The focus of the question isn't on why he'd be in the parade or how? But on what makes his attitude change. Every other factor mentioned corroborates that he'd be participating in the parade.
I believe the answer is A. please vote brainliest! thanks!
the weapons act without bias
The things that are falling are bombs. The bombs do not care what they hit. They do not have a preference for roads, roofs, thickets, or people. The bombers drop them with a specific target line up, but the bomb does not care what that is. This adds to the overall tone and mood of the poem.
Mirikitani's "Attack the Water" relates to Rukeyser's "Poem" because they both focus on what civilians experience during wartime. "Attack the Water" describes the struggle of Vietnamese people living during (and after) the Vietnam War, and of Japanese-Americans in the era of Japanese Labor camps. "Poem" reflects on the struggle of people living during both of the World Wars, trying to get by and to get through such a tragic time. Both of these poems show that even when people are not involved directly in a war, war can still have an immense impact on their lives.