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nirvana33 [79]
3 years ago
6

What electrical inventions are most essential to daily living?​

English
1 answer:
bulgar [2K]3 years ago
8 0
Microwave,light bulb , phone ,
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Summarize about amendment 5 with your own words.
ankoles [38]

Answer:

so I think that the fifth amendment in my own words would be change the reason why I say change is because it kind of changed the grand jury in a way if you think about it so if you change the way people did things and BC or before we switch to the Gregorian calendar I know it's kind of off but if you think about it it changed didn't it but it's more than change because they said it guarantees your right and it forbids a double jeopardy against self-incrimination so if you're in court and you got a case it protects your right against self-incrimination so nobody can do that to you and that's what I think about it

6 0
3 years ago
Which technique gives the reader information from the past to help explain a character's actions and reactions in a narrative? t
Andre45 [30]

Answer:

flashback

Explanation:

flashback is a technique used to remind us about the past of a character in a narrative to explain their influence on their today lives

4 0
4 years ago
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Describe in one hundred words what Descartes meant when he wrote: "I think, therefore I am."
Anton [14]

When there’s nothing left he still is left with himself and nothing else. Regardless of whether or not he is being deceived by some demon or his beliefs are wrong, he is able to see that even if he has the ability to doubt something he must be existing to even doubt it in the first place. The fact that he can think is what assures himself of his own existence, and a deceiving god cannot negate that. From this point on, Descartes can continue in his examination of reality without worry that he is by all means existing.

7 0
3 years ago
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Review the meanings of current on the left. Which
lys-0071 [83]

Answer:

Jay turned off the current before taking apart the

outlet.

The current from the overhead wire caused sparks

to fly.

Explanation:

When words are spelled or pronounced in the same way but have different meanings, they are called homonyms.

One of homonyms is the word "current" which can mean:

- something happening at the present time

- a movement of  body of water in a certain direction

- the flow of electrical energy

In the first answer, the outlet is a device whose purpose is to connect electrical devices to an electrical supply (plugging it in the socket). So, it's electrical current.

In the second answer, it denotes the moving of the water

In the third answer, it means that Todd's present roommate in neat.

In the fourth answer, since it comes from a wire and causes a spark, it denotes electrical current.

Finally, since Vanya is in the river, it denotes a flow of the water.

8 0
3 years ago
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Plz help! This is for the crucible, btw
riadik2000 [5.3K]

Answer: The phenomenon of witchcraft therefore highlights both the need to believe in stories and the capacity to see through them.

Explanation:

Witchcraft is often thought of, wrongly, as a thing of the past. In fact, it continues to be taken seriously by people all over the world. But because the subject of this study is, specifically, early modern witchcraft and its dramatic representation, it will be necessary to clarify what the term ‘witch’ meant within this specific context. As several early modern authors on witchcraft argued, the meaning of the word has changed over time. The senses in which ancient Latin or Greek authors used the terms that are typically translated as ‘witch’ are distinct from the senses in which sixteenth- and seventeenth- century English people used those terms, as well as from the senses in which the word might be understood in the present. The situation is further complicated by the variety of different understandings of what defined witchcraft in early modern England. Accusations of witchcraft tended to focus on the issue of maleficium – the harm it caused – while theoretical writings on witchcraft were usually more interested in the witches’ supposed pact with the devil. Magical power might be conceived of as inherent in the witch herself, in the objects or words she used, in the spirit with which she bargained, or as merely illusory. Disagreement over these and other issues continued throughout the period during which witchcraft was a criminal offence.

One assumption of this study – widely but not universally shared today – is that magic operating outside the laws of nature and bargains with the devil are not and never were possible, and that people, both past and present, who believed these things to be possible were, and are, mistaken. Consequently, there can be no definitive description of what a witch was, only a description of what a given person or group of people imagined a witch to be. Assuming that witches did not exist in the sense that they were often believed to, it is hardly surprising that early modern society did not reach a consensus on what witchcraft was; the subject was debated for centuries and eventually faded from public discourse without ever having been resolved. No work on early modern witchcraft, therefore, can ignore the fact that there was a wide range of opinion on the matter. Furthermore, it would be misleading simply to rely on an exhaustive list of the various opinions (even assuming all of these were documented). Many early modern people appear to have been quite flexible in what they were prepared to believe, and ideas about witchcraft were often fluid rather than fixed points of reference against which real-life situations might be judged. Many people were open to persuasion and argument, evidence was often open to interpretation, and whether a given proposition about an alleged witch was accepted or not might depend on a variety of local factors. Nonetheless, some broad generalisations are possible. One important point is that the late medieval and early modern period in Europe saw the emergence of a specifically Christian conception of witchcraft. Witchcraft belief, and laws against witchcraft, had existed long before this. But from the fifteenth century onwards, important people within the late medieval Church began to accept the idea that witches were evil and genuinely powerful servants of the devil, and could therefore be punished as a species of heretic. Perhaps the most important texts here are the Malleus Maleficarum (1486) of Institoris and Sprenger and the decree made by Innocent VIII, which lent papal authority to the subsequent witch-hunts in Germany. Always controversial, always contested, this idea nevertheless spread through Europe and led to a period of intense witchcraft persecution, peaking in the late sixteenth century. This conception of witchcraft is described in a variety of theological, medical, and philosophical writings and constitutes an important part of the body of work known as demonology. Demonological views of witchcraft frequently form the intellectual context of this study.

7 0
3 years ago
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