I guess a stalactite and a stalagmite could be referenced to a column. Although, only some could be considered column-like.
Stalactites hang from the ceiling and only on occasion do they ever reach the ground. I, myself have toured some caves and have witnessed stalactites reaching the ground, so in that way they could be referenced to a column. But the majority of them, that don't reach the ground, aren't very column-like.
Same goes with stalagmites, but these protrude from the ground, rather than hanging from the ceiling. I've never personally seen a stalagmite that has reached the ceiling of a cave and resembled a column. But I wouldn't doubt that there are a few out there.
So basically in conclusion, the majority of stalagmites and stalactites are not similar to columns. But the few that can go to cave floor to ceiling can resemble a column.
Hope this helps! Stay safe and stay healty! :3
Answer:
It's like a word or a sentence that doesn't belong
It's a noun but it it used grammatically wrong in the sentence
You'll know whenever the sentence or phrase stands out
Here's and example: Walking through the kitchen, the smoke alarm was going off." This sentence literally means that the smoke alarm was taking a stroll. Or walking away. Lol
Explanation:
Please let me know if this helps you.
Answer:
he is a person is the making a planr
Explanation:
In the slave societies of the Americas, a quadroon or quarteron was a person with one quarter African and three quarters European ancestry (or in Australia, one quarter aboriginal ancestry).
Would you mind showing the passage so I may identify the traits?