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Sonbull [250]
3 years ago
5

Which statement best explains the difference between an explanatory essay and an argumentative essay

History
2 answers:
valentinak56 [21]3 years ago
4 0

An argument is a textual or verbal standpoint that is usually defended with factual evidence or an appeal to a person's morality.  

    An essay is a short piece of writing meant to express a thought or opinion (or multiple thoughts/opinions). often times it too uses evidence or an appeal to a person's morals.

    A persuasive text is a text with the sole intent of convincing a person, or multiple people, to agree with an idea or opinion. It also can use evidence or an appeal to a person's ethics/morals.

cluponka [151]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

Provides information about a subject without offering APEX

Explanation:

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n 1883, Hungarian immigrant Joseph Pulitzer bought the troubled New York World. His readership was "the common man," and he succ
Lyrx [107]

The correct answer to this open question is the following.

In 1883, Hungarian immigrant Joseph Pulitzer bought the troubled New York World. His readership was "the common man," and he succeeded in reaching readers with light, sensationalistic news coverage, extensive use of illustrations, and circulation-building stunts and promotions. This brand of journalism became known as yellow journalism.

This kind of journalism focused on extreme or sensationalistic news or was reported in a sensationalistic way to capture the attention of readers. Pulitzer had a fierce competitor in Hertz, another newspaper owner and they competed for more readers. The way the found it better was not more objective news but sensationalistic news that entertained the readers.

7 0
4 years ago
Explain Hebrew beliefs about Solomon's temple, and the importance of Jerusalem to the Hebrew people.
Gala2k [10]

The crowning achievement of King Solomon's reign was the erection of the magnificent Temple (Hebrew- Beit haMikdash) in the capital city of ancient Israel - Jerusalem. His father, King David, had wanted to build the great Temple a generation earlier, as a permanent resting place for the Ark of the Covenant which contained the Ten Commandments. A divine edict, however, had forbidden him from doing so: "You will not build a house for My name," God said to David, "for you are a man of battles and have shed blood" (I Chronicles 28:3).


Artists rendering of Solomon's Temple<span>The Bible's description of Solomon's Temple (also called The First Temple) suggests that the inside ceiling  was 180 feet long, 90 feet wide, and 50 feet high. The highest point on the Temple that King Solomon built was actually 120 cubits tall (about 20 stories or about 207 feet).According to the Tanach (II Chronicles):
       3:3- "The length by cubits after the ancient measure was threescore cubits and the breadth twenty cubits". 
       3:4- "And the porch that was before the house, the length of it, according to the breadth of the house, was twenty cubits, and the height a hundred and twenty; and he overlaid it within with pure gold."Solomon spared no expense for the building's creation. He ordered vast quantities of cedar wood from King Hiram of Tyre (I Kings 5:20­25), had huge blocks of the choicest stone quarried, and commanded that the building's foundation be laid with hewn stone. To complete the massive project, he imposed forced labor on all his subjects, drafting people for work shifts that sometimes lasted a month at a time. Some 3,300 officials were appointed to oversee the Temple's erection (5:27­30). Solomon assumed such heavy debts in building the Temple that he is forced to pay off King Hiram by handing over twenty towns in the Galilee (I Kings 9:11).When the Temple was completed, Solomon inaugurated it with prayer and sacrifice, and even invited non­Jews to come and pray there. He urged God to pay particular heed to their prayers: "Thus all the peoples of the earth will know Your name and revere You, as does Your people Israel; and they will recognize that Your name is attached to this House that I have built" (I Kings 8:43).</span>
<span>Sacrifice was the predominant mode of divine service in the Temple until it was destroyed by the Babylonians some four hundred years later, in 586 BCE. Seventy years later, after the story of Purim, a number of Jews returned to Israel - led by the prophets Ezra and Nehemiah - and the Second Temple was built on the same site. Sacrifices to God were once again resumed. During the first century B.C.E., Herod, the Roman appointed head of Judea, made substantial modifications to the Temple and the surrounding mountain, enlargening and expanding the Temple. The Second Temple, however, met the same fate as the first and was destroyed by the Romans in 70 C.E., following the failure of the Great Revolt.As glorious and elaborate as the Temple was, its most important room contained almost no furniture at all. Known as the Holy of Holies (Kodesh Kodashim), it housed the two tablets of the Ten Commandments inside the Ark of Covenant. Unfortunately, the tablets disappeared when the Babylonians destroyed the Temple and, therefore, during the Second Temple era the Holy of Holies was reduced to small, entirely bare room. Only once a year, on Yom Kippur, the High Priest would enter this room and pray to God on behalf of the Israelite nation. A remarkable monologue by a Hasidic rabbi in the Yiddish play The Dybbuk conveys a sense of what the Jewish throngs worshiping at the Temple must have experienced during this ceremony:God's world is great and holy. The holiest land in the world is the land of Israel. In the land of Israel the holiest city is Jerusalem. In Jerusalem the holiest place was the Temple, and in the Temple the holiest spot was the Holy of Holies.... There are seventy peoples in the world. The holiest among these is the people of Israel. The holiest of the people of Israel is the tribe of Levi. In the tribe of Levi the holiest are the priests. Among the priests, the holiest was the High Priest.... There are 354 days in the [lunar] year. Among these, the holidays are holy. Higher than these is the holiness of the Sabbath. Among Sabbaths, the holiest is the Day of Atonement, the Sabbath of Sabbaths.... There are seventy languages in the world. The holiest is Hebrew. Holier than all else in this language is the holy Torah, and in the Torah the holiest part is the Ten Commandments. In the Ten Commandments the holiest of all words is the name of God.... And once during the year, at a certain hour, these four supreme sanctities of the world were joined with one another. That was on the Day of Atonement, when the High Priest would enter the Holy of Holies and there utter the name of God. And because this hour was beyond measure holy and awesome, it was the time of utmost peril not only for the High Priest but for the whole of Israel. 
</span>
5 0
4 years ago
Which of the following statements best reflects how the UN changed international responses to security threats after World War I
RUDIKE [14]

Answer: It consolidated the political interests of the US, Great Britain, and the USSR in the postwar period.

Explanation: SO you didn't show Source 2. But, this is generally the answer

8 0
3 years ago
True or false; Was Miguel de Cervantes and El Greco were prevented by catholic rulers from creating works of art
qwelly [4]

Answer: False.

Explanation:

5 0
3 years ago
A London hero who was showered with symbolic American gifts of tobacco and hams for
cricket20 [7]

Answer:

Explanation:

The Long Struggle for Representation: Oral Histories of African Americans in ... Collection of the U.S. House of Representatives, Jim Oliver Collection ... in London, the British Parliament bestowed a replica of the Magna Carta to ... “Nothing could be more symbolically important to the people of the United States.

Hope that helps!!

3 0
3 years ago
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