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Fynjy0 [20]
4 years ago
8

Helppppp!!!!!!!!!! ..... .....

English
2 answers:
dedylja [7]4 years ago
8 0
A) toxic
B) run out
Should help x
Marat540 [252]4 years ago
4 0

Answer:

A) toxic

B) run-out

Explanation:

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The literal and figurative meaning in ' transports me to my happy place'<br><br>PLEASE HELP​
Ira Lisetskai [31]

Answer: Literal. It is the place we can go, no matter what is happening in our lives, and we find peace there. ||| Figurative. a memory, situation, or activity that makes you feel happy

5 0
3 years ago
Which do modern experts believe to be true of Homer?
Sidana [21]
The answer is D. He based the stories he told on other tales and legends of ancient Greece. Homer wrote about existing myths and legends, and in a different time from Socrates. C is something we don't really know and A is wrong since these mythologies existed before him.
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3 years ago
Which of the following examples might be perceived by listeners as manipulative and condescending?
vfiekz [6]

Answer:

"I had intended to talk about, let's see, three, no, just two reasons for this

change."

Explanation:

3 0
3 years ago
How did the early inventors create an illusion of moving figures?
svlad2 [7]

Answer:

The illusion of motion pictures is based on the optical phenomena known as persistence of vision and the phi phenomenon. The first of these causes the brain to retain images cast upon the retina of the eye for a fraction of a second beyond their disappearance from the field of sight, while the latter creates apparent movement between images when they succeed one another rapidly. Together these phenomena permit the succession of still frames on a motion-picture film strip to represent continuous movement when projected at the proper speed (traditionally 16 frames per second for silent films and 24 frames per second for sound films). Before the invention of photography, a variety of optical toys exploited this effect by mounting successive phase drawings of things in motion on the face of a twirling disk (the phenakistoscope, c. 1832) or inside a rotating drum (the zoetrope, c. 1834). Then, in 1839, Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre, a French painter, perfected the positive photographic process known as daguerreotypy, and that same year the English scientist William Henry Fox Talbot successfully demonstrated a negative photographic process that theoretically allowed unlimited positive prints to be produced from each negative. As photography was innovated and refined over the next few decades, it became possible to replace the phase drawings in the early optical toys and devices with individually posed phase photographs, a practice that was widely and popularly carried out.

There would be no true motion pictures, however, until live action could be photographed spontaneously and simultaneously. This required a reduction in exposure time from the hour or so necessary for the pioneer photographic processes to the one-hundredth (and, ultimately, one-thousandth) of a second achieved in 1870. It also required the development of the technology of series photography by the British American photographer Eadweard Muybridge between 1872 and 1877. During that time, Muybridge was employed by Gov. Leland Stanford of California, a zealous racehorse breeder, to prove that at some point in its gallop a running horse lifts all four hooves off the ground at once. Conventions of 19th-century illustration suggested otherwise, and the movement itself occurred too rapidly for perception by the naked eye, so Muybridge experimented with multiple cameras to take successive photographs of horses in motion. Finally, in 1877, he set up a battery of 12 cameras along a Sacramento racecourse with wires stretched across the track to operate their shutters. As a horse strode down the track, its hooves tripped each shutter individually to expose a successive photograph of the gallop, confirming Stanford’s belief. When Muybridge later mounted these images on a rotating disk and projected them on a screen through a magic lantern, they produced a “moving picture” of the horse at full gallop as it had actually occurred in life.

7 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
How has the novel's island setting changed Piggy? A. The lush surroundings have affected his desire to be rescued. B. The abunda
oee [108]

Answer:

D

Explanation:

Not a 100%

8 0
3 years ago
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