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Please help me translate it and then help me see if it is correct.

The wall honors Americans who died in the war. This wall honors Americans who died in the war.

However, root words can also mislead (trick) us. However, root words can also mislead us.

root: the part of the word that carries the main meaning and that other forms are based on. Root: the main meaning of the word is the foundation of other parts.

Of those three sentences, the punctuation of the first two sentences is problematic and should be punctuated like the third sentence. And should not be used in the first sentence, and the second sentence is the antonym of the previous sentence, so but should be used, so only the third sentence pattern should be completely correct.

My humble opinion, I hope the poster adopts it.

About the Dust Bowl:

The "Big Sand Bowl" of the 1930s was one of the major natural disasters in American history. Historians usually attribute the disaster to a purely natural drought , In fact, the cause of the disaster is more complicated, involving both natural and man-made factors.

The cause of the "Big Sand Bowl" can be traced back to the Americans who immigrated to the Western Plains after the Civil War. They discovered that they were facing an unprecedented drought area, and the planting knowledge they had learned in the east was of little use here.

Faced with the problem of drought and lack of rain, farmers began to practice new planting methods. Method. They first plowed deeply and mixed a certain amount of sand into the turned-up surface. However, they did not sow seeds at this time, but gradually increased the humidity of the soil. They also adopted various methods to protect water sources, while also reducing corn cultivation and introducing special adaptations from Eastern Europe. Winter wheat grew in arid areas. These methods were effective enough to encourage farmers to continue to expand into new areas.

The era of continuous expansion of plains farmers began during the First World War, with market demand and government sponsorship in Europe. Subsidies raised the price of wheat to $2 per bushel, and prices for other grains increased accordingly. By 1919, Colorado, Nevada, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas had increased wheat acreage to 135 million acres— —11 million acres of it were once covered by weeds. In order to adapt to large-scale planting management, farmers invested in new machinery and equipment such as disc cultivators, combine harvesters, and tractors. In 1915, there were approximately 3,000 tractors in the entire state of Kansas. The total number of tractors in the state has exceeded 660,000.

New agricultural equipment has brought the per capita output value of crops to unprecedented heights, but because the equipment is expensive, farmers are inevitably involved in new debts. The area under cultivation is constantly increasing, and each additional piece of land means a new loan. Paying off debt is not a problem in good times, but unfortunately it means a nightmare in bad times or poor economic conditions. , the natural environment and the economic environment deteriorated together in the 1920s.

By 1930, there were serious problems in the international wheat market, and farmers had no choice but to cultivate more land in order to pay off their debts. , there was a severe rain shortage across the Great Plains. Starting in 1931, the Southern Plains, which normally receives 18 inches of annual rainfall (the minimum rainfall required for many crops), lost 3 to 7 inches. Crops were drying up in the ground, and the land was in the sun. Grilled and cracked, with temperatures above 100 degrees Fahrenheit every day for several weeks, the Great Plains entered an unprecedented drought period that would not return until the 1930s. Not only is the severity of the drought unprecedented, but the damage to humans is also rare. The decline in crop prices means that tens of thousands of acres of land are left idle under the scorching sun, with crops dying of drought. Still resistant to drought, now that the turf has gone, the land cannot withstand strong winds.

Dust storms have been common on the plains for centuries, especially in the dusty areas of western Kansas, western Oklahoma, and northwestern Texas. Today, more areas are cultivated and more vulnerable to invasion, and sandstorms have become more severe.

In May 1934, a famous dust storm swept up 300 million tons of sand from the Great Plains and blew it all the way to the Atlantic Ocean, covering New York, Washington, and even cargo ships at sea 300 miles away. In the 1930s, there were constant sandstorms in the southern plains. The wind and sand cover the sky and avoid the sun, blow into houses, accumulate sand and soil, and even kill people and animals. An Associated Press reporter wrote in 1935, "Three humble words have become a kind of painful begging in the mouths of western farmers, controlling daily life in the sand bowl area of ??the mainland today... Let it rain." So. , the southern plain also has a new name: Big Sand Bowl.

There were 22 sandstorms here in 1934; 40 times in 1935; 68 times in 1936; 72 times in 1937; 61 times in 1938; 30 times in 1939; 17 times each in 1940 and 1941. Uncultivated land is most likely to form sand and dust during drought; economic collapse and prolonged drought without rain occur at the same time, and farmers are faced with a vicious cycle with no way out. Many families gradually abandoned their farms and fled on the road, becoming Okies (Okies) who sought a life in California. Several "New Deal" organizations launched various programs to try to help alleviate the crisis. The "Resettlement Management Office" attempts to buy back land that is unsuitable for farming; the "Forest Service" plants more than 200 million saplings to build "isolation zones" to block wind and sand; and the "Land Conservation Service" promotes new farming methods to consolidate soil and prevent sand.

All efforts worked to a certain extent, but it was not until the rains really came in 1941 and World War II began to stimulate demand for agricultural products that the Great Sand Bowl disaster came to an end. New agricultural techniques, including irrigation systems connected to underground water sources, effectively prevented the return of dust storms in the 1930s (although a few storms still frequently hit the area). Whether farmers can accept the lessons of the "Big Sand Bowl" and whether they can meet the special needs of this land will be an important prerequisite for whether sandstorms will reappear