19th century. Beethoven elevated <span>he symphony from an everyday genre produced in large quantities to a supreme form in which composers strove to reach the highest potential of music in just a few works.</span>
The writer will choose words skillfully if he manipulated words to create an advertisement.
<h3>What is Advertisement?</h3>
An advertisement is a paid promotional tool backed by an identified sponsor to call public attention to an offering or a brand. Advertising is a means of communication with the users of a product or service.
Advertisements are messages paid for by those who send them and are intended to inform or influence people who receive them.
Thus, Advertisements are the way to call public attention, so the writer will have to choose words skillfully.
Learn more about Advertisements here,
brainly.com/question/15308852
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I answered a question similar to this here:
brainly.com/question/8880255I think the thinker who addressed the questions you're asking the best was Immanuel Kant. Kant believed firmly that there are universal values all rational beings will agree upon, if we think about them thoroughly enough. That doesn't mean there won't be a wide range of variation between cultures or between different time periods. But in whatever culture, in whatever time, there will be a beautifulness seen in the human form, for instance. That might vary between cultures and over time. Plump persons may be seen as "beautiful" in the art of one period while thin people are considered beautiful in another era. Or the styles of cosmetics and hair/clothing will change. But overall there is a desire for beautiful expression of the human form in the art of all cultures and times.
The ancient philosopher Plato thought in ways like this too -- that there is an ideal of beauty, of truth, etc, that exists out there in the universe somehow. The attempts we make to express it are all trying to grasp that ultimate form of beauty somehow.
A nighthawk is a nocturnal bird, hence the name. Value contrasts create the minute illusions of form in the shining, glossy hair atop the woman’s head, as well as the concavity of the male patrons’ fedoras.