Tha morning in march, both Calpurnia and Caesar felt something was wrong, she begged him not to go to the senate, Caesar also knew, from all the different bad omens, that it wasn't a good idea to leave the house, but death is death, and it shall come for us all, what difference does it make where i die? He thought to himself, I could also die here in my home, in front of my wife. So he decided to go to the Senate and the rest is known history.
Answer:
The best answers to the two blank spots in the question: A appreciation of the U.S dollar makes foreign goods cheaper relative to American goods, resulting in a ____ in net exports in the U.S. and a ____ shift if the IS curve in the U.S., everything else held constant, would be: 1. decrease, or fall, of net exports in the U.S and 2. left shift of the IS curve.
Explanation:
In economics, many factors will influence how products, services, goods, sales, income, exports, imports, and many more elements of economics, will work. But essentially, and for the purpose of this particular question, when the cost of the dollar (appreciation) rises, meaning buying something produced in the U.S costs more because of that appreciation, then, foreign goods, whose currencies are less appreciated than the dollar, will become cheaper, and thus, preferrable. This will directly impact the export activities because people will prefer products that are cheaper in cost. As this happens, and almost as a chain reaction, the IS curve, which is a representation of the combination of incomes and real interest rates, will tend to the left, as the American goods and services are less elected by consumers because they are more expensive.
The people singing together felt uplifted.
An opinion, reasons and beliefs (?) :)
Tone- how the narrator/speaker feels towards the events of the narrative they are describing
Mood- how the piece makes us—the reader—feel
Evidence- examples of the literary devices the author used and how they were used (diction, metaphor, imagery, contrast, etc.)
Paragraph #1:
The tone (coming from the narrator) is joyous, lively, and sentimental
The mood (to the reader) is warm, festive, and personal
EVIDENCE: Imagery of pleasant sensations like “bright lights” the “smell of cookies and cider,” “bright packages,” and the “warm room” as well as the selected vocabulary of “gleamed,” “hummed,” and “playfully,” demonstrate the narrator’s comfort, familiarity, and enjoyment of the holidays while indicating to the reader that this is a safe, happy, and celebratory time.
Paragraph #2:
The tone is depressed and disheartened
The mood is bleak and expired
EVIDENCE: words like “long, cold winter” “dry, brittle (tree),” and the juxtaposition (contrast) between putting “decorations back into their boxes” with the past “finery” of the house show the narrator’s disappointed feelings towards the end of the holiday season and the general “sigh” of the house.