Why do we experience cloud like smoke near our mouth while we speak during the winter season
Answers
Answer:
Explanation:
When we inhale in winters, there is very cold outside. So the water vapour in our breath gets condenses with lots of ice or water droplets in the air. This is the reason why smoke like thing is experienced by us only in winters. This can be also called as water vapour..
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Answer:
Annelies Marie "Anne" Frank (German pronunciation: [ˈanəˌliːs maˈʁiː ˈʔanə ˈfʁaŋk] (listen), Dutch: [ˈɑnəˌlis maːˈri ˈʔɑnə ˈfrɑŋk]; 12 June 1929 – February or March 1945)[3] was a German-Dutch diarist of Jewish heritage. One of the most discussed Jewish victims of the Holocaust, she gained fame posthumously with the 1947 publication of The Diary of a Young Girl (originally Het Achterhuis in Dutch; English: The Secret Annex), in which she documents her life in hiding from 1942 to 1944, during the German occupation of the Netherlands in World War II. It is one of the world's best known books and has been the basis for several plays and films.
Anne Frank
Anne Frank smiling for her school photograph in 1941
Born
Annelies[1] or Anneliese[2] Marie Frank
12 June 1929
Frankfurt, Prussia, Weimar Republic
Died
March 31, 1945 (aged 15)
Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, Eastern Hanover, Nazi Germany
Resting place
Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, Lower Saxony, Germany
Occupation
Diarist
Language
Dutch
Citizenship
German (1929–1941)
Stateless (1941–1945)
Relatives
Otto Frank (father)
Edith Frank (mother)
Margot Frank (sister)
Buddy Elias (cousin)
Signature
Born in Frankfurt, Germany, she lived most of her life in or near Amsterdam, Netherlands, having moved there with her family at the age of four and a half when the Nazis gained control over Germany. Born a German national, she lost her citizenship in 1941 and thus became stateless. By May 1940, the Franks were trapped in Amsterdam by the German occupation of the Netherlands. As persecutions of the Jewish population increased in July 1942, the Franks went into hiding in some concealed rooms behind a bookcase in the building where Anne's father, Otto Frank, worked. From then until the family's arrest by the Gestapo in August 1944, she kept a diary she had received as a birthday present, and wrote in it regularly. Following their arrest, the Franks were transported to concentration camps. In October or November 1944, Anne and her sister, Margot, were transferred from Auschwitz to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, where they died (probably of typhus) a few months later. They were originally estimated by the Red Cross to have died in March, with Dutch authorities setting 31 March as their official date of death, but research by the Anne Frank House in 2015 suggests it is more likely that they died in February.[3]
Otto, the only survivor of the Frank family, returned to Amsterdam after the war to find that her diary had been saved by his secretary, Miep Gies, and his efforts led to its publication in 1947. It was translated from its original Dutch version and first published in English in 1952 as The Diary of a Young Girl, and has since been translated into over 70 language