1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
nadezda [96]
3 years ago
7

Which of the following is greatest factor that determines climate in any given location

English
1 answer:
alukav5142 [94]3 years ago
4 0

LOWERN is an acronym for 6 factors that affect climate.

Latitude. Depending on how close or how far it is to the equator.

Ocean currents. Certain ocean currents have different temperatures. ...

Wind and air masses. Heated ground causes air to rise which results in lower air pressure. ...

Elevation. ...

Relief. ...

Nearness to water.

You might be interested in
What does it mean to "live like" Martin Luther King? How will Justyce try to live?
irina1246 [14]

Answer:

To live like mlk is to go through the same problems he and our people went through many years ago and it still happens today so in a way we our still living like him well us colored people we get treated less than any other race when no race should be worth more than any other because no one is better than us.

5 0
3 years ago
Can some one make an Haiku for me.
Yanka [14]
Sand scatters the beach
waves crash on the sandy shores
blue water shimmers
4 0
3 years ago
In about two hundred words, write a summary of Okonkwo's attitudes and feelings as described in chapters 14–16, including an exp
Elina [12.6K]

I found only the short summar of those chaptrs. I guess , you may find it useful. Okonkwo’s uncle, Uchendu, and the rest of his kinsmen receive him warmly. They help him build a new compound of huts and lend him yam seeds to start a farm. Soon, the rain that signals the beginning of the farming season arrives, in the unusual form of huge drops of hail. Okonkwo works hard on his new farm but with less enthusiasm than he had the first time around. He has toiled all his life because he wanted “to become one of the lords of the clan,” but now that possibility is gone. Uchendu perceives Okonkwo’s disappointment but waits to speak with him until after his son’s wedding. Okonkwo takes part in the ceremony.

The following day, Uchendu gathers together his entire family, including Okonkwo. He points out that one of the most common names they give is Nneka, meaning “Mother is Supreme”—a man belongs to his fatherland and stays there when life is good, but he seeks refuge in his motherland when life is bitter and harsh. Uchendu uses the analogy of children, who belong to their fathers but seek refuge in their mothers’ huts when their fathers beat them. Uchendu advises Okonkwo to receive the comfort of the motherland gratefully. He reminds Okonkwo that many have been worse off—Uchendu himself has lost all but one of his six wives and buried twenty-two children. Even so, Uchendu tells Okonkwo, “I did not hang myself, and I am still alive.”

Summary: Chapter 15

During the second year of Okonkwo’s exile, Obierika brings several bags of cowries to Okonkwo. He also brings bad news: a village named Abame has been destroyed. It seems that a white man arrived in Abame on an “iron horse” (which we find out later is a bicycle) during the planting season. The village elders consulted their oracle, which prophesied that the white man would be followed by others, who would bring destruction to Abame. The villagers killed the white man and tied his bicycle to their sacred tree to prevent it from getting away and telling the white man’s friends. A while later, a group of white men discovered the bicycle and guessed their comrade’s fate. Weeks later, a group of men surrounded Abame’s market and destroyed almost everybody in the village. Uchendu asks Obierika what the first white man said to the villagers. Obierika replies that he said nothing, or rather, he said things that the villagers did not understand. Uchendu declares that Abame was foolish to kill a man who said nothing. Okonkwo agrees that the villagers were fools, but he believes that they should have heeded the oracle’s warning and armed themselves.

The reason for Obierika’s visit and for the bags of cowries that he brings Okonkwo is business. Obierika has been selling the biggest of Okonkwo’s yams and also some of his seed yams. He has given others to sharecroppers for planting. He plans to continue to bring Okonkwo the money from his yams until Okonkwo returns to Iguedo.

Summary: Chapter 16

Two years after his first visit (and three years after Okonkwo’s exile), Obierika returns to Mbanta. He has decided to visit Okonkwo because he has seen Nwoye with some of the Christian missionaries who have arrived. Most of the other converts, Obierika finds, have been efulefu, men who hold no status and who are generally ignored by the clan. Okonkwo will not talk about Nwoye, but Nwoye’s mother tells Obierika some of the story.

The narrator tells the story of Nwoye’s conversion: six missionaries, headed by a white man, travel to Mbanta. The white man speaks to the village through an interpreter, who, we learn later, is named Mr. Kiaga. The interpreter’s dialect incites mirthful laughter because he always uses Umuofia’s word for “my buttocks” when he means “myself.” He tells the villagers that they are all brothers and sons of God. He accuses them of worshipping false gods of wood and stone. The missionaries have come, he tells his audience, to persuade the villagers to leave their false gods and accept the one true God. The villagers, however, do not understand how the Holy Trinity can be accepted as one God. They also cannot see how God can have a son and not a wife. Many of them laugh and leave after the interpreter asserts that Umuofia’s gods are incapable of doing any harm. The missionaries then burst into evangelical song. Okonkwo thinks that these newcomers must be insane, but Nwoye is instantly captivated. The “poetry of the new religion” seems to answer his questions about the deaths of Ikemefuna and the twin newborns, soothing him “like the drops of frozen rain melting on the dry palate.”

4 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
What prevents the speaker from going into the woods? by robert frost
serious [3.7K]

Answer:

To watch his woods fill up with snow.

Explanation:

Frost is just stopping because he is struck by the beauty of a single scene, a single aspect of nature which we can all relate to--the snow, the trees, the silence.

4 0
3 years ago
The Hobbit
anyanavicka [17]
A certain person ("he") has become the role model of society and greatly contributes tho the well being of the people. But the character speaking ("I") is baffled and and in awe on why he is receiving such blame. The character is trying to get society to question their thoughts and to reconsider their beliefs.
This means that whoever is saying this feels he was misunderstood. Even though another person has received great respect, the narrator ponders why he is worse off than that person. He want those who judged him to reconsider their judgement.
7 0
3 years ago
Other questions:
  • Check my work? Please.
    8·1 answer
  • Read the following excerpt from a biography on Mark Twain and answer the question.
    12·2 answers
  • Make a sentence with the words microdont microwave microsecond the each word has to has there own sentence and please make ur ow
    15·1 answer
  • Read the paragraph.
    10·1 answer
  • What makes a thillier work
    8·1 answer
  • Read the following short story excerpt, then answer the question that follows:
    15·2 answers
  • Can someone help me please I’m in desperate need of help and I have to turn this in soon please anyone :(
    13·1 answer
  • A personal narrative is a story that describes a memorable event from your past. Think about the following to help you choose yo
    12·1 answer
  • Which new state is famous for diamonds ??​
    5·2 answers
  • In The Crucible Why does Proctor forbid Mary from returning to court?
    9·1 answer
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!