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Dear ZhNya,
you won't believe what happened to me today I saved a kid from death. The kid was in a apartment that was catching on fire! I walked up to the apartment when I noticed a crowd. I asked what was going on, and a man answered there's a kid in a apartment that was on fire. That reminded me of my sister who died in a fire so I, ran into the apartment without a second thought. I went in and looked everywhere until I found the kid. Then I ran out in a hurry because I was running out of breath. That's the story of how I saved a kid.
In <em>“Part Eight: The Word Shaker”,</em> changes come to Himmel Street.
The change that happens to Liesel is the change from an angry, distrusting character to one that has a strong sense of family and friends.
When the book comes to an end, she has strong personal morals and ethics and although they are challenging to enforce, she stands by them, despite turbulent and testing times.
<h3>What happened in the book?</h3>
This is the character development that centers on the main character, Liesel who is stubborn and strong-willed and always angry at something.
After Himmel Street is bombed, this brings about a perspective change to Liesel as her loved ones are killed by the blast and this shatters her world and she says farewell to Rudy, only after he is dead.
She goes home with the mayor and Frau Hermann arrives and takes Liesel home with them.
Liesel remains in mourning as she refuses to eat and keeps the ash of the Himmel Street bombings on her skin as a form of remembrance, funeral, or respect.
Read more about Liesel and Himmel Street here:
brainly.com/question/11394908
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Google overcame its competitors because the developers knew how to market and knew how to make a product that consumers wanted. In the early days of the internet, search engines where filled with adds, links, tools like calculators and calendars. While having links to Facebook or Reddit, and having the calculators and calendars seemed helpful, it crowded the page. Those search engines had too much going on to the point it became unhelpful. Google understood that people wanted a search engine that had its purpose and did it well. It's simple, does it's job, and it doesn't overwhelm the consumer when they want to look something up.
Think of it this way, if you're trying to look up a recipe, do you want to go to the page that had 20+ other links and flashy colors and pop up adds, or a simple search bar that will take you right where you need to go with no distractions?