Answer:
By Adriana Aumen, College of Arts and Sciences
Courageous, conflicted, cantankerous or just plain cute, the colorful characters brought to life in Japanese anime film and television can teach a great deal about the country’s culture, says Michael Arnold, incoming Japanese studies instructor at Washington State University.
Featuring vibrant, hand-drawn and computer-animated graphics, anime productions provide glimpses of Japanese life, values and social norms as well as everyday language and idiomatic expressions used in context, Arnold said.
Recognizing the great potential of anime as an educational tool, the School of Languages, Cultures, and Race (SLCR) at WSU invited Arnold to teach “Transnational Anime: Japanese Animation History and Theory” in the spring 2019 semester. It is among three new or returning courses added this academic year to the broader suite of Japanese language and culture study options.
Answer:
your best at giving tonation to the picture...
Explanation:
The emotion or feelings the artist or director or composer wrote or drew :) hope this helps
Answer:
1) Wolfsbane
Oleander
White Snakeroot
Deadly Nightshade
Water Hemlock
2) Mint
vanilla
lilac
lavender
and rosemary
Explanation:
For #1 they are all very small flowers but they would be inappropriate bc they could harm small children and even adults who are not care full and may try to ingest
Answer:
The two examples of an emergencie would be
Explanation:
1 example: a person has a fall in their workplace when they are cleaning the bathroom, the right thing would be to have a safety and hygiene brigade and request the presence of one of the members to support first aid while arriving by ambulance or a doctor as required.
2 example: A person falls working at heights, trained personnel, whether a doctor, a member of the security and hygiene brigade, see if they have vital signs and request that an ambulance be called for an expert review and transfer if necessary to a hospital.