Answer:
Hiking is a powerful cardio workout that can: Lower your risk of heart disease. Improve your blood pressure and blood sugar levels. Boost bone density, since walking is a weight-bearing exercise.
The fishes adapt to their environment focusing mostly on the currents in the water.
Answer: Option C
<u>Explanation:</u>
The fishes have features that are well developed to adapt their aquatic environment. They have fins to propel them in the water current. When they are swimming they change directions coherent to the water currents.
The streamlined body of the fishes help them stealthily glide through the water currents. The bladders allow the fish to maintain the buoyancy level. The lateral line of the fishes helps detect vibrations in the water.
Starting with its very title, "Song of Myself" is indeed a poetic embodiment of the transcendentalist philosophy. Whitman (or the speaker who calls himself Whitman) doesn't sing and praise some outside ideals or occurrences, but himself. This is the transcendentalist ideal of self-reliance, explained in Emerson's eponymous essay. It says that the greatest strength of every individual is his/her own self, independent, free from authority and restraints, liberated and self-sufficient. Both Emerson and Whitman, each in his own right, have written a giant ode to individualism.
Another transcendentalist ideal embodied in Whitman's famous poem is relationship with nature. In his view, nature is the source of genuine beauty and wisdom, uncorrupted by the touch of social and political institutions. Whitman says "<span>I will go to the bank by the wood and become undisguised and naked", which means that nature is the only realm of sincerity, and people can only be true to themselves if they are independent of humanity but close to nature.
Just like Transcendentalism has been a unique, authentic American take on Romanticism, Whitman has been the pillar of American national and cultural identity in poetry. He has taken the very American notion of individualism (defined and praised by transcendentalists) and put it in his poetry, most notably in "Song of Myself" as the most self-obsessed, yet not egotistical account of modern American poetry.</span>
Answer:
B. The universe began expanding with the Big Bang and it is still expanding today.
Explanation:
The universally accepted theory about how the universe came to be as it is now is the Big Bang theory, which describes how the universe expanded from an initial state of extremely high density and high temperature. As the universe kept expanding, it began to cool down. It is still expanding even now. New galaxies, nebulae, stars, and planets are born all the time, while old ones die. The universe is constantly changing and it is full of life.
This is why option B is the correct one.