Answer: The correct answer is : The climax of this story begins when Prospero orders his revelers to unmask the mysterious stranger. They began to look in each of the rooms of different colors until they reached the last one, the black one in the western part of the corridor, everyone is scared to see the intruder in a horrible suit of death and blood. Prospero orders to be caught and unmasked to be able to punish him, but all the guests are very scared and he has to do it himself. Prospero finds out that the stranger is the red death that is there to kill him and also his revelers. The figure faces Prospero and the Prince falls to the dead ground.
1. To support the topic of the paragraph
2.To wrap up your paper and close it off
3. Show where you got your work so you don't get flagged for plagerism
Article Five of the United States Constitution
describes the process whereby the Constitution, the nation's frame of
government, may be altered. Altering the Constitution consists of
proposing an amendment or amendments and subsequent ratification.
Amendments may be proposed either by the Congress with a two-thirds vote in both the House of Representatives and the Senate or by a convention of states called for by two-thirds of the state legislatures.To become part of the Constitution, an amendment must be ratified by
either—as determined by Congress—the legislatures of three-fourths of
the states or State ratifying conventions in three-fourths of the states.[2] The vote of each state (to either ratify or reject a proposed amendment) carries equal weight, regardless of a state’s population or length of time in the Union.
Additionally, Article V temporarily shielded certain clauses in Article I from being amended. The first clause in Section 9, which prevented Congress from passing any law that would restrict the importation of slaves prior to 1808, and the fourth clause in that same section, a declaration that direct taxes
must be apportioned according to state populations, were explicitly
shielded from Constitutional amendment prior to 1808. It also shields
the first clause of Article I, Section 3, which provides for equal representation of the states in the United States Senate, from being amended, though not absolutely.