Answer:
Explanation:
No changes necessary
The class of 2016 presented their gift to the principal c
The team members were upset when they were eliminated from the finals a
The band sold their CD’s after the concert a
Concurrence
Answer:
B. Replied
Explanation:
I huésped and got this know
Answer:
Renaissance describes the European cultural epoch in the period of upheaval from the Middle Ages to modern times in the 15th and 16th centuries. It was characterized by an effort to revive the cultural achievements of ancient Greece and Rome. Starting from the cities of northern Italy, the artists and scholars of the Renaissance influenced the countries north of the Alps with their innovative painting, architecture, sculpture, literature and philosophy, albeit in different ways.
Europe had already looked back to antiquity in the Middle Ages, but important ancient texts were only rediscovered and made accessible in the late Middle Ages. The ancient state was studied in Renaissance humanism.
During the Renaissance, re-explored ancient art, literature, philosophy and everyday life began to be re-examined. Renaissance culture perceived itself as a rebirth of ancient culture, which does not mean, however, that the development of Renaissance human thought was limited to the reminder of the old. The era was marked by a move away from religion-centered values towards a people-centered worldview. It was characteristic to discuss and strive for beauty. In the past, the criteria for the goodness of art had been based on what was right, and that right was superior to man.
Answer:
Step 1:
1. Claim- To claim something means to state something that is true.
2. Counterclaim- A counterclaim is basically stating the opposite of your argument.
3. Rebuttal- Rebuttal is to state directly why a person is wrong.
4. Clincher- decisive fact, argument, act, or remark
From your neighborhood softie :)
Alice has experienced many odd things since falling down a rabbit hole and things continue to get weirder from there so it's only respectable that she's starting to think not everything is impossible. Even in this scene we experience another impossible thing; "n<span>ot much larger than a rat-hole: she knelt down and looked along the passage into the loveliest garden you ever saw...wander about among those beds of bright flowers and those cool fountains..." Notice how it says flower beds and fountains. If the door that led to this place was the size of a rat-hole what on earth could've gone through the hole and planted the garden and created a fountain? That is yet another impossible thought just from the passage. Alice has every right to think there must be a way to get inside, afterall, someone had to be inside to put everything there, right?
(Feel free to copy/paste this as your answer, I don't mind.)
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