Answer:
C. Botany 101: How to Grow Tasty Tomatoes
Explanation:
- Quotes are used for a magazine.
- Parentheses are for intext cite.
- Websites needs to have all important words Capitalized.
Here are my three proposals:
- Eliminate all welfare programs that took tedious process and transform it into unversal basic income (that will be given to all legal citizen without question)
- The government should create an institute that is specifically functioned to gather data regarding citizens' economic status
- Make all citizen required to report their economic status everytime they received a government help
Hamlet’s repeated discussion of his mother’s behavior—“frailty, thy name is woman!” —mainly suggests that he: considers women to be weak.
<h3>What prompted Hamlet's Statement?</h3>
Hamlet made the statement above when his mother (Gertrude) married his uncle Claudius shortly after the death of his father.
So, by making this statement he was trying to blame the supposed moral weakness of women as the cause of his mother's behavior.
Learn more about Hamlet here:
brainly.com/question/806658
This question seems a little tricky because the answer is too obvious to be accepted without further discussion. However, I will try to explain in detail the validity of my answer.
If we say that a song transcends musical Genres, it is because the song has gone beyond the limitations of rhythm; such a song is too great to be framed into one specific musical category. Because that is what genres are, musical categories used to define music.
Having mentioned the former, one can no longer enclose such a song into one single genre, sometimes it could be considered a “fusion” if two well-defined musical genres are overtly present in the song.
But all in all, the answer to this question would be no, you can no define any longer a transcended song into either or one musical genre, at most you could call it a fusion.
Answer:
C
Explanation:
The following statement from Lady Macbeth explains it.
"Give me the daggers: the sleeping and the dead
Are but as pictures: 'tis the eye of childhood
That fears a painted devil. If he do bleed,
I'll gild the faces of the grooms withal;
For it must seem their guilt."