She created a self-portrait in an initial letter in a Homeliary. <span>Scholars today credit Nun Guda with being one of the first women in western civilization to create a signed self-portrait.</span>
So that people can trust you and so on
Pitch is indicated by the position of notes on the lines and spaces on the staff
Is the play "The Bourgeois in the Nobility" by Jean-Baptiste Moliere relevant today?
Yes, in my opinion, Jean-Baptiste Moliere’s play The Bourgeois in the Nobility is very relevant today. It remains topical because the play in the play is not at all about estates (commoners and noblemen), but about people's vanity. And now vanity blossoms in full bloom. Therefore, many modern people could see themselves in Mr. Jourdain if they wanted to.
Who can be called now "Mr. Jourdain"? Yes, many! For example, those who are trying hard to seem "successful", "wealthy", buying status items for themselves and getting into debt. Or those who imagine themselves "not like everyone else" and with all their might emphasize their "elitism". Or those citizens who demonstratively despise immigrants from the village and try not to mention their own grandmother living in the village. In other words, all the many people who try to seem different than they are - all of them are in some ways Messrs Jourdins. Therefore, the play by Jean-Baptiste Moliere "The Bourgeois in the Nobility" was not at all outdated.
The answer is "<span>libretto".
</span><span>The text, or book, of a musical dramatic work is called the libretto.
</span>Libretto is derived<span> from </span>Italian and is<span> diminutive of the word </span>libro<span> which actually means "Book". The person who writes librettos is called "</span>librettist".