Answer:
This was difficult since I quit band and only have little notes lol
tune in order:
(bottom, top)
mi (B)(for both boxes?), re (D)
mi (B), mi (E)
so (D), fa (G)
so (D), fa (G)
fa (C)/mi (B), fa (F)/mi(E)
I couldn't tell if they were mirroring one another or not so just try these patterns
that's all I could do sorry mate :(
Answer:
In it's natural state milk is negatively charged. This negative charge allows for the dispersion of casein in the milk as very small micelles. When acid is added to the milk, the positive ions neutralize the negatively charged casein micelles.
Explanation:
Answer:
You are using the <u>Linear Perspective</u> principle.
Explanation:
This principle creates <u>an illusion of depth</u>. Instead of drawing a river <u>with a flat appearance, you decided to create depth using lines that part from the canvas center (horizontal line), begins to separate themselves (vanishing point) and ended on both sides of the canvas (parallel lines). This simple process just works if you use its three principles: parallel lines, a vanishing point, and the horizon line. </u>
Though Donatello was a descendant of a branch of the important Bardi family, he was brought up in a more plebeian tradition than his older contemporary Lorenzo Ghiberti. Gifted with humanistic insight and a quality of will that were highly prized in the early Renaissance, Donatello revealed the inner life of his heroic subjects, memorable images which have conditioned our very conception of 15th-century Florence. Sharing neither Ghiberti's feeling for line nor Filippo Brunelleschi's interest in proportion, Donatello worked creatively with bronze, stone, and wood, impatient with surface refinements and anxious to explore the optical qualities he observed in the world about him. His later art, saturated with the spirit of Roman antiquity, is frequently disturbing in its immediacy as it attains a level of dramatic force hitherto unknown in Italian sculpture.