Recalling and remembering the past is the job of one thing; memory. embarrassing memories and terrible dates are only two examples of experiences that might be recalled thanks to your brain's memory.
Both the information and events you recall as well as your brain's capacity to hold them all are included by the term "memory." You can remember someone's name if you have an excellent recall for their names. It's also a sign that you had a wonderful time working at that one McDonald's over your summer break. The capacity of a computer's memory has also come to be referred to as its "memory." There is no evidence that computers are fond of their previous software.
Answer:
There are multiple different answers depending on context, but in context with brainly, I assume they're talking about Edge nuity. Edge is a shortened way to say it and it's basically online school. Many people come here from Edge nuity to brainly to look for answers to questions they don't know.
Explanation:
I had to space out the word because brainly won't accept Edge nuity together. It just puts it as an inappropriate word
Explanation:
Equivocation is the use of ambiguous language to conceal the truth or to avoid committing oneself. This is used quite often in Shakespeare's play, mostly with Macbeth and Lady Macbeth when they try to hide the fact the they plan to kill King Duncan. In Act 1 Scene 7, Macbeth says, "False face must hide what the false heart doth know."
In Act 2 Scene 3, when Macduff finds the bloody corpse of King Duncan, the porter that is still drunk from drinking in the night says that he is the porter of hell and says "equivocator, that could swear in both the scales against either scale". This line is considered a reference to the book "A Treatise of Equivocation". The book was about how Catholics dealt with dangerous questions from Protestant inquisitors. If the Catholics told the Protestants that they were Catholics they would get in serious trouble and it would be a sin against God. So they decided to equivocate. The Catholic equivocators would tell the Protestants what they wanted to hear, but God would know that they would be telling the truth. This in another equivocation but doesn't necessary make it a good thing.
When Macbeth visits the witches for the apparition, the witches that are working for the devil, equivocate all their apparitions. The first one says that "armed Head", Macbeth thinks that it means beware Macduff but it actually is that Macduff in armor, head of the army will defeat Macbeth and chop his head off. The next apparition, says that, Macbeth must "Be bloody, bold, and resolute; laugh to scorn / The power of man, for none of woman born / Shall harm Macbeth". Macbeth then fears no one because everyone is born of a woman but Macduff isn't. He was ripped from his mother's womb and we find out the casarean doesn't count as born from a woman. The final apparition, says "child crowned, with tree in hand and assures Macbeth that, "Macbeth shall never vanquish'd be until / Great Birnam wood to high Dunsinane hill / Shall come against him". The child crowned means that the child of Duncan, Malcolm, will become king which happens in the end of the play. Macbeth doesn't believe that the wood and trees can move until we find out that the army uses the trees as camouflage and are able to move it.