Answer and Explanation:
Manang Biday is a popular folk song that is about courtship. This song is actually about conveying love to a woman in a most respectful way, thus showing a cultural aspect. The lyrics of this song show the courtship of a guy to a woman who is older than the former. The song is melodious and its way of communicating through this song is so beautiful that it looks amazing when it is being sung. He has courteously sung the song to show respect to the woman, whom he loves. The texture of this song seems romantic when a guy said to the woman to look down from the window so she can realize the love of him. The first paragraph is the initial rhymes in which the woman responded that she is still like an unplucked flower which still needs to bloom.
It’s a courteous melody that demonstrates a woman's response to a guy who is trying to show his love. She says that don’t go for the fruits which have fallen from the tree but go for those who are unreachable even if you have to climb up to the tree. Do something impossible to do.
Overall the tone remains conversationally. And the song’s dynamic was changing back and through because of the conversation going between a guy and a woman.
Answer:
A
Explanation:
The money multiplier is the amount of money that banks generate with each dollar of reserves which is the amount of deposits. So in A the money multiplier will be larger if banks hold on to excess reserves and it will be smaller if private citizens hold on to cash, i.e. they don´t deposit the money in the banks.
Answer:
b. Kevin has anticipatorily repudiated the contract and is liable to Jim for damages.
Explanation:
The single was released in the United Kingdom on 3 December 1984[1] and aided by considerable publicity it entered the UK Singles Chart at number one and stayed there for five weeks, becoming the Christmas number one of 1984. So 1984
<span>The Babylonians called it the dynasty of Babylon, for, though foreign in origin, it may have had its actual home in that city, which it gratefully and proudly remembered. It lasted for 296 years and saw the greatest glory of the old empire and perhaps the Golden Age of the Semitic race in the ancient world. The names of its monarchs are: Sumu-abi (15 years), Sumu-la-ilu (35), Zabin (14), Apil-Sin (18), Sin-muballit (30); Hammurabi (35), Samsu-iluna (35), Abishua (25), Ammi-titana (25), Ammizaduga (22), Samsu-titana (31). Under the first five kings Babylon was still only the mightiest amongst several rival cities, but the sixth king, Hammurabi, who succeeded in beating down all opposition, obtained absolute rule of Northern and Southern Babylonia and drove out the Elamite invaders. Babylonia henceforward formed but one state and was welded into one empire. There were apparently stormy days before the final triumph of Hammurabi. The second ruler strengthened his capital with large fortifications; the third ruler was apparently in danger of a native pretender or foreign rival called Immeru; only the fourth ruler was definitely styled king; while Hammurabi himself in the beginning of his reign acknowledged the suzerainty of Elam.</span>