A scene can mean two things. A scene can be the setting of a story, or (what I think you are referring to) it can be a segment of an Act of a play. A scene separation within a play is usually included in order to allow time for a change in setting during the performance. A chapter is a segment of a book. So, to summarize, a scene is a segment of a play and a chapter is a segment of a book.
Answer:
There's not really any specific way.
Explanation:
Billie Eilish is a very distinctive singer and there is no real exact way to sound like any particular singer. If you really want to sound like someone the best thing to do is just listen to a particular sentence (or lyric) and repeat it over and over again and each time if your heading in the right track you could sound a bit like her. But there is no exact way to do this.
If im correct it would be A .
I've found that three of the most important techniques are "Oil, Fresco, and Tempera" and if you take a look of the paintings you can actually see that they are really I could say creamy, realistic, colorful, like "hard worked", you can truly see every brush-stroke and they also depict beauty of the human body.
And, on the other hand we have the "new techniques" where you find works that are also realistic but not as creamy and hard worked as the old, in that type of works you can also see that there's not a lot of work with brush-strokes like in the old ones.