<span>B. ability to change dynamics.
The pianoforte (in English soft-loud) was called in this way due to its ability to play both soft and loud notes. </span><span>The </span>pianoforte<span> is an acoustic and stringed </span>musical instrument<span> invented </span><span>by </span>Bartolomeo Cristofori<span> in the XVIII century, although the exact year is still uncertain, in which the strings are struck by hammers.</span>
Answer:
I can :)
Explanation:
The centerpiece of the Hanukkah celebration is the hanukkiah or menorah, a candelabra that holds nine candles. Eight candles symbolize the number of days that the Temple lantern blazed; the ninth, the shamash, is a helper candle used to light the others. Hanukkah is a celebration of them winning the war of the Maccabees over the larger Syrian army. The story of the miracle, as described in the Talmud, occurred after the liberation of the Temple in Jerusalem during the Maccabean Revolt, and describes how the finding of a jug of pure oil that was to be enough to light the lamp for one day; instead, it lasted for eight days.
thats all I know, hope it helped :)
Answer:
Correct answer is Olympe de Gouges.
Explanation:
Olympe de Gouges advocated for the rights of women during the Revolution. She was politically very much involved, and at the end because of her beliefs she was beheaded.
Mary Astell is not correct answer as she was English feminist that died more than fifty years before the Revolution started.
The same thing goes with Rousseau, who was a famous French philosopher who died ten years before the Revolution.
Maria Merian also lived before the French Revolution. She was a famous Swiss scientist.
Explanation:
It’s often thought that the other sovereigns of Europe regarded the toppling of Louis XVI in 1791 and his execution two years later as an affront to established order, and a danger to their own safety. In fact this is inaccurate. To see why, you need to keep in mind that Europe for most of its history basically worked like New York in the Godfather trilogy—a bunch of rival families who made a big show of being civilized and honorable, but who were at the end of the day utterly bloodthirsty, calculating and ruthlessly pragmatic. Violence, even against a king, was not condemned in the least; or rather, it was on the surface, while beneath, everyone set about figuring out how it could be turned to his advantage. The French Revolution, from an external point of view, was seen mainly as a weakening of the French nation, and as a consequence it presented lots of potential opportunity.