I believe that the most fitting answer for this question would be A, reading from the script. I remember I gave a speech one time and I read almost entirely from a page that I had written beforehand. It was judged as much weaker as a speech that I had memorized beforehand. In addition, varying your delivery can add interest and keep your audience engaged. Notecards are more effective than reading from a script, as you will not be reading word-for-word and will only be using your notecards as jumping-off points. Hope this helps.
Answer:
Hail is formed when drops of water freeze together in the cold upper regions of thunderstorm clouds. ... A frozen droplet begins to fall from a cloud during a storm, but is pushed back up into the cloud by a strong updraft of wind. When the hailstone is lifted, it hits liquid water droplets
Explanation:
Nicolaus Copernicus was the first thinker to develop the sun-centered model, as shown in option A.
We can arrive at this answer because:
- During the Middle Ages, it was believed in a spatial model centered on the Earth.
- This model claimed that the Earth was the center of the universe and all other planets revolved around it.
- However, Nicolaus Copernicus when researching the stars realized that the sun was the center of the solar system and that the other planets, including the Earth, revolved around it.
Nicolaus Copernicus' model was not accepted by the Catholic Church, which dominated all branches of society at the time, and for that reason, he was heavily punished.
Learn more about it here:
brainly.com/question/2492760
What is your gender?
let's first look at the case where you are female:
my daughter's mother would then be... just you.
so then you are Theresa's daugher!
if you are male then
your daughter's mother is your wife (let's assume for now)
so Theresa's daughter is your wife,
and Theresa is your mother-in-law and you are her son-in-law.
This is all assuming the "traditional family"; in a non-traditional family you would just be the father of her grandchild, nothing else, and probably she would refer to you just with a name..