B. Highlights of the Nebraska Museum of Art
Explanation: the other options focus on aspects that does not focus on the art displayed in the museum. A talks about physical sites, not the actual art. C talks about the importance of art which is a general title that does not specify the needed topic (it is also not a basis of informing— this is usually opinionized) while D talks about the instructional basis of artists learning paint: not the art displayed itself.
My guess would be each quatrain develops the problem of the poem and<span>the turn (volta<span>) comes at the beginning of the closing couplet.</span></span>
Broccoli is a green vegetable that vaguely resembles a miniature tree. It belongs to the plant species known as Brassica oleracea.
It’s closely related to cabbage, Brussels sprouts, kale and cauliflower — all edible plants collectively referred to as cruciferous vegetables. Broccoli is a human invention. It was bred out of the wild cabbage plant, Brassica oleracea . It was cultivated to have a specific taste and flavor that was more palatable to people.
Here's how that worked. Wild cabbage has small flower buds and is a biennial. That means it only flowers every other year.
In a controlled environment, it can be forced to reproduce itself many times. When an offspring of the plant with larger, tastier buds grows, gardeners threw away the less tasty plants and started reproducing from that one.
In future generations, there were further opportunities to get plants with larger, tastier buds. And other genes that make the process easier, such as plants that have a faster growing cycle emerged.
In selecting and reinforcing the traits enjoyed by more people, humans took wild cabbage and cultivated a new kind of plant altogether, broccoli.
If we are referring to academic vocabulary, we mean to say the words or group of words that are used in the academic dialogue. These words are not common and are not frequently encountered in daily conversations. We can change the word awful to dreadful.
The simile “lay down / to sleep like a snow-covered road / winding through pines” refers to death. To be more exact, to death of the author's father. The message that author wanted to convey is to show how people can pass through their loss and to represent all the loneliness of death, comparing it to the loneliness of the winter road, empty and deserted.