An annotated bibliography contains brief descriptions as to why the sources are relevant or useful. This cannot be found in a regular works cited page.
Answer: Music has come a long way in the last thousand years or so, and we're going to tell you how! ... as composers turned to compose instrumental works for various ensembles. ... The term “Classical Music” has two meanings ... Beethoven and Schubert bridged the gap between the Classical and Romantic periods of music.
<u>Loc is matched with Place (1 – B). </u>It is the Latin word for the <em>place</em>, and so it is today used in the roots of the words connected to places and placing, such as <em>location</em>, <em>dislocate, local, locus</em>.
<u>Ject is matched with To Throw (2 – D). </u>Ject is the Latin word for the verb <em>to throw</em>. It appears as the root in the words like <em>reject </em>(connected to throwing back), <em>projector </em>(throwing pictures on the screen), but also words like a <em>jet </em>are derived from it as the plane is "thrown" into the air.
<u>Meter is matched with Mesure (3 – A). </u>Today <em>meter </em>is the unit for measuring the distance. The word meter comes from the Greek language.
<u>Grad and gress are matched with to step (4 – C).</u> <em>Grad </em>and <em>gress </em>both mean to step on Latin. It is today in English seen in the words that are like 'stepping' to another phase or stepping stone – <em>graduate, grades</em> in school, to <em>grade </em>someone,<em> digress, transgress</em>, etc.
<u>Junct is matched with To join (5 – E). </u><em>Junct </em>is the Latin word for join, unite, and is today the root for words connected to joining, such as <em>conjunct, junction, and adjunct</em>.