Community would be a antonym for the word ecosystem.
Answer and explanation:
I'll present the answers to this long task in a list form. Hope it'll be helpful:
- What is the problems with the maids? The problem with the maids is that they acted on disloyalty while Odysseus was far away, this resulted on the maids being hanged to death.
- What does Penelope ask Odysseus, the beggar in disguise? Since Penelope didn't recognise him, she aked him about his roots, where he was from, his family and about her husband.
- What does Odysseus requests that Penelope not ask him about? Odysseus requests Penelope not to ask him about his life.
- What would make Penelope happy? What would make Penelope the happiest person is that Odysseus returned home safely.
- What does Penelope tell Odysseus about the suitors? That they wanted to marry her whatsoever and not to wait until he returned home.
- How does Penelope feel about marrying one of the suitors? She doesn't want to do so. In order for her to make time while she waited for her husband's return was to come up with various challenges for the suitors to beat them and try their luck with marrying her.
- What does "the beggar" pretend? Odysseus, disguised as a beggar with the help of Athena, plans to take his revenge upon the suitors that insist on marrying his wife.
- What does Penelope do as she listens to "the beggar"? She asks him question about her husband.
- What does Penelope ask "the beggar" to do? Penelope asks the beggar to describe how Odysseus is.
- What does "the beggar" tell Penelope about Odysseus? "The beggar" proceeds to describe very well how Odysseus looks like.
- What does "the beggar" tell Penelope about Odysseus's whereabouts? "The beggar" tells Penelope that Odysseus had a long journey but that he is still alive and that he would be returning home in a short period of time.
- What does Eurycleia say to Odysseus? Eurycleia tells to Odysseus that she knows who he really is.
- How does Odysseus respond to Eurycleia? At the previous revelation, Odysseus reacts with a death threat is she tells anyone about it.
- What did Eurycleia recognize on Odysseus’s thigh? What does she realize about "the beggar"? Eurycleia recognized the boar hunt scar on Odysseus's thigh.
- What secret must Eurycleia keeps? She must keep in secret that Odysseus is still alive, and where he is located at the moment.
- Explain the spell Athena cast on Penelope: Athena casted a sleep enchantment on Penelope.
A) The food has become so scarce that we eat beans and potatoes in everything, including in our bread.
When I was answering this questions I was stuck between A and B, but I realized that A was the correct answer. The description of the lack of food shows you how the food has gotten so scarce because of to the poverty due to the war. On the other hand, answer B shows that there are high levels of stress, but that doesn't necessarily mean that it has to do with the war.
Hope this helps :)
also pls give me brainiest
Is this a multiple choice question? If not, than here is my answer: African Americans was a cause of the Great Migration. Hope I helped.
Answer:
The first impact of the plague was, therefore, demographic. The lives they took in just seven years would take two centuries to recover, while the survivors would reorganize in a different way. During the epidemic years, the rural population had moved to the cities in search of food and company, and given the large number of vacancies left by the plague, they no longer had to return. The countryside was depopulated, while life in the cities was revitalized, driven by the concentration of fortunes that followed the high mortality. The old rural aristocracy, accustomed to living comfortably on incomes, finds two possibilities: lease their land at lower prices or exploit them directly, hiring producers and paying them higher and higher days. The stately power lost, therefore, part of its purchasing power, while the day laborers, regretful valuable due to their shortage, increased their well-being.
The shortage of arms and the rise of the bourgeoisie were decisive for the development of the technique, one of the hallmarks of the Renaissance, closely linked to the parallel advancement of science. Machines reduce the amount of force and work needed, and appear to serve a particular class, the bourgeoisie, which finds in them a concrete response to their needs. In the technical ascent an essential change of mentality prevails, since the manual work - the mechanical arts - was despised during the Middle Ages. Leonardo da Vinci claims it when he says: "In my opinion, the sciences that have not been born of experience, mother of all certainty, and that do not end in a definite experience, are vain and full of errors." Science and technique go hand in hand, and good proof of this are the calculations of the architect and sculptor Filippo Brunelleschi, prior to the construction of the dome of Santa María del Fiore, in Florence.