Representational structure is most likely the term you're looking for.
If you are familiar with the art of Pablo Picasso, you have a good example of someone who produced works of analytic cubism. There's not a use of perspective to give shape or depth to the figures. Instead, shapes are overlapped and structured in ways that represent the idea being presented. Do an Internet search for Picasso's 1909 painting, "Houses on the Hill Horta de Ebro," and you'll see the effect. You get a feeling of houses on a hill, even though everything is presented in layered cubic shapes.
Answer:
Many Nazi leaders killed themselves before the end of the war because they knew that the war was going to be lost and they did not want to be captured and tortured/killed.
Could I get Brainliest?
During the debates on the adoption of the Constitution, its opponents repeatedly charged that the Constitution as drafted would open the way to tyranny by the central government. Fresh in their minds was the memory of the British violation of civil rights before and during the Revolution. They demanded a "bill of rights" that would spell out the immunities of individual citizens. Several state conventions in their formal ratification of the Constitution asked for such amendments; others ratified the Constitution with the understanding that the amendments would be offered.
On September 25, 1789, the First Congress of the United States therefore proposed to the state legislatures 12 amendments to the Constitution that met arguments most frequently advanced against it. The first two proposed amendments, which concerned the number of constituents for each Representative and the compensation of Congressmen, were not ratified. Articles 3 to 12, however, ratified by three-fourths of the state legislatures, constitute the first 10 amendments of the Constitution, known as the Bill of Rights.
Gravity exerts a downwards force on the roots.