1.) Assistance
2.) Assistants
3.) Difference
4.) Divisor
5.) Grammatical
6.) Humanity
7.) Pail
8.) Pale
9.) Principal
10.) Principle
<span>He great classicist A. W. Lawrence (illegitimate younger brother of the even more famously illegitimate T.E. “of Arabia”) once remarked of the Parthenon that it is “the one building in the world which may be assessed as absolutely right.” I was considering this thought the other day as I stood on top of the temple with Maria Ioannidou, the dedicated director of the Acropolis Restoration Service, and watched the workshop that lay below and around me. Everywhere there were craftsmen and -women, toiling to get the Parthenon and its sister temples ready for viewing by the public this summer. There was the occasional whine of a drill and groan of a crane, but otherwise this was the quietest construction site I have ever seen—or, rather, heard. Putting the rightest, or most right, building to rights means that the workers must use marble from a quarry in the same mountain as the original one, that they must employ old-fashioned chisels to carve, along with traditional brushes and twigs, and that they must study and replicate the ancient Lego-like marble joints with which the master builders of antiquity made it all fit miraculously together.</span>
In the text, the author shows how we are proud to imagine that people from the past or the future are different from us because of the technology that existed and will exist in each era. The author shows that this is a defect in our personality, by imagining that technology shapes people in some way, in addition to shaping the activities that we perform with these technologies.
The author states that people from the past were like us, but with less technology. To reinforce this idea, she uses communication devices (cell phone, phone, smartphone, skipe, among others) to show that the most archaic models had the same purpose (to allow people to communicate) as the most modern devices that we know today. Which shows that in the past, people had the same communication needs as us, they just didn't do it as quickly and efficiently as we do today. However, we have a hard time imagining this, and we think that the population of that time is different from us.
Answer:
to what?
Explanation:
the answers to what? what's the question