Answer:
the sentence that describes the picture is:
After the shoe was completed, the artist invited the public to take pictures.
Explanation:
The reason behind this is that there are two arguments to find reason in the answer. First of all, the artist couldn't let the pubic interact with the work if it was unfinished. Therefore the had to wait until it was finished to allow them to react with it. Second, the picture shows us that the artist invited the public to take pictures of the work after it was completed because he uses body language in the picture to encourage them to approach to the work.
Answer:
It allows the narrator to see other people struggling with new cultures. Why does the author include details about Meg drinking her milkshake in "The All-American Slurp"? to reveal similarities between the cultures of Meg and the narrator.
This is in Malay and it means Make a sentence using a combination of two descriptive words used breeder!
Answer:
see explanation
Explanation:
the correct form is "Maljada!ono"
Why? Well, the ending is "ada." For "ada" verbs, the ending always becomes !ono. For ada verbs, make sure not to remove "ada."
Sevi: Malikki
Monava: Malmono
Ekri: Ittrim'sa!ayaverchu||maljada!a
!ousa: Malja!ounte'tekidao|ueigu
Sevi is known for the "ikki" ending with the first three letters. Monava is known for "Kampre" which is the neutral form of the verb with the ending "a;" switching to simply "o." Ekri is known for the long words of the verb, which explain the meanings of the verb. Actually "Ittrim'sa!ayaverchu||maljada!a" itself means "Running with examples of exhaustion, heat, water, sweat loss" since he classified verbs like so.
!ousa is an animal god who changes verbs in a similar way, except likes to change the meaning of the verb. Instead of "run" it is now "walk." He is the "trick" of the animal pair (Sanj||a||a)
The consonant change for the verb to ichevatu is a to ae. So a sounds in the four verb changes become "ae" sounds. Malikki will sound like "Maelikki." In the older days, a became ae. Now, it still hasn't changed but is used less frequently.
Enjoy! Sa'am!!