<span>Jarvis has always dreamt of becoming a writer. His teacher at school told him that (creativity) and (passion) are the essential tools for any person who wants to become a writer. She also told him that he should experiment with different literary (genres) to improve his writing.</span>
Answer:
A. The author thinks analyzing any art can be compared to taking a machine to pieces.
Explanation:
The author believes the beauty of art is surface-level and any deeper analyzation is comparable to "string and pulleys."
So we need to acknowledge that we are integrating with respect to common sense. The integral of velocity will give us the position function.

Go post this in physics lol
Answer:
Madame Sofronie owns the hair shop to which Della sells her hair. She’s described as “large, too white, chilly,” and her manner with Della is brusque and to the point. She wastes no time evaluating Della’s hair and setting a price—twenty dollars. Her manner directly contrasts that of Della and Jim, who value their love and sentiment over material value. For Della, her hair is something special and prized. For Madame Sofronie, her hair is worth the dollar value she can get out of it.