Answer:
The radio adaptation's tone is more urgent than the novel's tone.
Explanation:
In the novel excerpt from H. G. Wells' <em>War of the Worlds</em>, the passage talks bout the arrival of the aliens as <em>"an ordinary falling star" </em>and the people hardly minding it's occurrence. Even though the narrator thinks <em>"hundreds must have seen it"</em>, it seemed to cause no panic among the people.
But the radio adaptation by Howard E. Koch of the same novel shows a news reporter interrupting a <em>"dance music"</em> to report about the <em>"explosions of incandescent gas, occurring at regular intervals on the planet Mars"</em>. This, along with the speech reporting voice will sound more dangerous than the mere narration in the novel version. <u>The tone in the radio adaptation presents a more urgent and serious tone while the novel's tone is more relaxed and even the people seem unfazed by it.</u>
Answer:
i'm pretty sure the answer is A.
They carried little ammunition to conserve ammo. Also, if the plane got shot down and it was carrying a LOT of ammo, that is a huge waste. On the other hand, if it did not have as much, the loss is not as huge.
Hope that Helps!
-Chris
Answer:
The decline of the Spanish empire was brought about by many factors. Money was tight for the Spanish during the 17th century, despite that galleons filled with gold were sent from the Americas (though many were raided by pirates or were wrecked in storms). But conquering and forming an empire is one thing; maintaining it quite another. Often the natives of a conquered land are not happy with the conditions they're subjected to by the conquerors, just as often those conditions are brutal and unfair. So they rise up in arms, and that means that empire has to spend a lot of money on armies and weapons to extinguish it.
Explanation:
<span>Marco Polo was a Venetian merchant traveller whose travels are recorded in Livres des merveilles du monde, a book that introduced Europeans to Central Asia and China.</span>