Answer: Bebop
Explanation: Bebop is a sub-type, style or label of jazz that contains basic musical instruments needed for rhythm i.e drums and bass, then an instrument for shaping a kind of melody using a chord such as a piano and there are also usually some wind instruments such as trumpet or saxophone, so four to six musicians are in the band. The characteristics of such jazz is a fast tempo with accented chords that change rapidly, there is a lot of improvisation, that is a style where the mastery of musicians comes to the fore. Although there is a lot of improvisation, one can enjoy rapid and frequent changes of rhythm and harmony, and listening to this type of jazz means enjoying the mastery of musicians, while the very form of this jazz itself is not suitable for dance.
Answer:
Option B.
Explanation:
False, is the right answer.
The Dillon Rule is named after John Forest Dillon, a Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Iowa. He was a personality who hugely suspected regional authorities and the local officials. Due to this distrust, he expressed his popular rule which was immediately adopted by state supreme courts throughout the state and was approved by the Supreme Court of Virginia before the 19th century. His rule interpreted the decisions when there is a problem of whether or not a regional government has a special potential.
Answer:
instrumentality
Explanation:
Instrumentality is a term that is used by Talcott parsons and Robert Bales to refer to an emphasis on tasks, a focus on more distant goals and concerns for he external relationship between one's family and other social institutions.
Instumentality is of the belief that successful performance will result in some outcomes. And the outcomes will be more technical and instrumental to a set of subjective probabilities.
By the late 1700s, Europeans had explored a great deal of the world. In fact, it is probably more beneficial to mention the places they had <em>not </em>explored.
Antarctica/the Arctic
Jungles/Rainforests in Oceania, Africa, SE Asia, and South America
The highest peaks of large mountain ranges (Himalayas, Andes, etc.).