Why? What’s wrong? I’m always here to talk :)
Answer:
Why would I do that to you
Explanation:
I would never do anything like that to anybody
The first movement is usually in Sonata form
Answer:
Hey there!
Explanation:
This is ur answer....
<em>1. When you understand the profitability of each item, you can develop better pricing strategies to better engineer your menu. It's important to know which items are making you money. With insight from your menu analysis, you can alter your menu and your recipes to items more profitable overall.</em>
<em>2. The Pareto principle, also known as the 80/20 rule, is a theory maintaining that 80 percent of the output from a given situation or system is determined by 20 percent of the input.</em>
<em>3. Once you know how much of each menu item you sold over a certain period of time and its contribution margin, you can categorize them based on popularity and profitability in a menu matrix. Menu items will fall into one of four menu engineering categories: Cash cows, stars, duds or puzzles.</em>
<em>4. This one you need to research on the basis of sales mix...</em>
<em>5. Unpopular menu items with low contribution to profit margin (low, low) Puzzles: Unpopular menu items with high contribution to profit margin (low, high). (Need a little more research)</em>
Hope it helps!
Brainliest pls!
Have a good day!^^
Answer:
It's difficult to find evidence for your answer to this question, because Lady Macbeth says so little in the scene. She's distracting attention. Well, you could say this - depending on how you read the scene. She pretends to faint in order to distract Macduff's attention away from Macbeth and to avert suspicion from herself and her husband. She was an instrumental participant in Duncan's murder and deliberately pretends to faint to give the impression that she is shocked by the tragic situation.
One reading is that her faint is faked to distract from Macbeth's shaky story. But if the faint is real, it suggests she just now realizes the truth of what they've done, and is overwhelmed by her husband's ability to kill not only Duncan but also the attendants, and lie so easily about it.