<span>the application of techniques like mass production
Let's look at the available options and see what makes sense.
the use of heat and open fires for cooking
- This sounds like the discovery of fire and as such it happened a long time before the nineteenth century. Wrong answer.
the application of techniques like mass production
- This one looks promising. We'll take if the other 3 options are just plain silly.
the introduction of earthenware such as clay vessels
- This is more recent than the discovery of fire. But it's still a long time ago. Literally thousands of years BC. So wrong answer.
the discovery of the technique of roasting raw foods
- Another discovery that happened thousands of years ago. So also the wrong answer.
So of the 4 choices, 3 of them happened literally thousands of years ago and so well before the nineteenth century. That leaves only 1 viable choices, so the answer is "the application of techniques like mass production"</span>
Answer:
all of the above mediums use texture.
Explanation:
If I believe it’s c I’m sorry if I’m wrong but that seems to be right
Explanation:
Rhythm, in music, the placement of sounds in time. In its most general sense, rhythm (Greek rhythmos, derived from rhein, “to flow”) is an ordered alternation of contrasting elements. The notion of rhythm also occurs in other arts (e.g., poetry, painting, sculpture, and architecture) as well as in nature (e.g., biological rhythms).
Rhythm
QUICK FACTS
RELATED TOPICS
Music
Eurythmics
Metre
Rhythmic mode
Īqāʿāt
Isorhythm
Period
Aksak
Beat
Colotomic structure
Attempts to define rhythm in music have produced much disagreement, partly because rhythm has often been identified with one or more of its constituent, but not wholly separate, elements, such as accent, metre, and tempo. As in the closely related subjects of verse and metre, opinions differ widely, at least among poets and linguists, on the nature and movement of rhythm. Theories requiring “periodicity” as the sine qua non of rhythm are opposed by theories that include in it even nonrecurrent configurations of movement, as in prose or plainchant