Answer:
Your ignorance is what is causing us to have a big argument.
Explanation:
Answer: (just FYI anytime I answer a question based on this play, it says I’ve included profanity if I spell their names out, so I will have to misspell them)
10a juleti is shocked to find that ramio, the man she loves the most, is from the family she hates the most, that she “loves a loathèd enemy” is something she is new to.
10b joliette cannot truly love remoe yet, as she did not know this about him, and has not decided if she loves him despite this family feud. She still has yet to learn everything about him, but she is currently going through infatuation because of his prettyboy face.
Explanation:
Pls post the picture i want to answer this ❤️
There are only two times of the year when the Earth's axis is tilted neither toward nor away from the sun, resulting in a "nearly" equal amount of daylight and darkness at all latitudes. T<span>he word equinox is derived from two Latin words</span><span> equal and </span>Nox.<span> At the equator, the sun is directly overhead at noon on these two equinoxes. </span>
Answer:
George Parker Winship, A. M. (29 July 1871 – 22 June 1952) was an American librarian and author, born in Bridgewater, Massachusetts. He graduated from Harvard in 1893.
He was librarian of the John Carter Brown Library at Providence, R.I. from 1895 to 1915. Subsequently, he took charge of the collection of rare books made by Harry Elkins Widener and housed in the new Widener Memorial Library at Harvard. Winship was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1899.[1]
Winship was a scholar as well as a librarian. He edited a number of historical works and published: The Coronado Expedition (1896); John Cabot (1898); Geoffrey Chaucer, (1900); Cabot Bibliography (1900); William Caxton (1909); Printing in South America (1912); and The John Carter Brown Library (1914).