Answer:
Infinity.
Explanation:
Infinity isn’t a number, it’s a concept. You could write this as simply infinity + 2, but infinity is just... infinity, there’s no end, it’s not a number.
Answer:
1- Everything must be edible
2. Must be visually pleasing
True?
I don't know what you're trying to say here, but I know this is a true statement, so,
Happy studying!
~Mistermistyeyed.
Characters operate within the constraints of their circumstances. Two characters that may otherwise be friends may be turned against each other by mutually exclusive objectives or hostile circumstances. For example, Mercutio and Thibeault in "Romeo and Juliet" display similar values and would perhaps have gotten along, were they not allied with warring families.
George and Lenny in Of Mice and Men also display an interesting relationship. They are very different, but in need of one another in unique ways. They are both in difficult economic circumstances, and have disproportionate advantages (George's intellect, Lenny's strength).
The circumstances characters are in dictates, to an extent, the relationship between characters, because it dictates whether the characters offer an facilitation or obstacle to one another's objectives. Even within a play, a change in the situation and thus the calculus of the characters can change the dynamic between them.
Romanticism was more so a fantasy while realism is arguing about real stuff