Answer:
"The incarnation of Jesus"
Explanation:
in other words, the argument was that Jesus, one of the members of the trinity, was "made of flesh and bone" and therefore could be painted, unlike the other parts of the trinity which are argued to be "of the spirit"
in other words, if I may be so brash in my wording, people were more or less like
"you can't draw what you can't see!"
and the catholic church was like
"BUT YOU CAN SEE JESUS, HE HAS A BODY"
(sorry but I just found the simplified argument a bit funny, I'm sitting here imagining my siblings arguing about if ghosts are real again...)
Answer:
Said if I leave her, she gon' die
Well, *****, you done with life
Better not pull up with no knife
'Cause I bring guns to fights
Explanation:
Answer:
remained less faithful to the old styles than their early-sixties predecessors had
Explanation:
First one: It would be on Sol
Second one: No. It would be on La. The note is B. And is a Bflat
(I don't know Bass Clef as well. I play Alto Sax, which uses Treble Clef. So please forgive me)
Third one: It would be A flat
Fourth one: It would be C then C flat
(Again, I don't know Bass Clef that well, so don't count on my answers)
Answer:
Well I remember back in the renaissance or Shakespearean era, around when the black plague started theaters weren't indoors but rather outdoors. If you go that far back I guess people weren't kept cool but you have to more specific.
An example of what the theatre looked like