Answer:
They try their best to patch it up and begin to fight off the sharks with an oar.
Anytime you include pictures, photos, and other illustrations in documents, it helps the writer show great amounts of complicated data in a way that is easy-to-understand. Using these images helps save space and the graphic elements work to visualize how complex information can be put to together in an appealing way.
In this booklet, written by the Environmental Services department of the City of Portland, there are a lot of illustrations designed to help observe the site, plan, and construct your rain barrel. The pictures in the "Construction" section specifically help you to know about:
- the seven tools needed to build your own rain barrel
- the five tools required to disconnect your downspout and connect it to your barrel
- the six steps to constructing your rain barrel
The end result of these illustrations is that more citizens of Portland (and elsewhere) can properly plan for, and successfuly complete the project of making their own rain barrel. Ultimately, this will have a positive effect on the environment. Specifically, the more rain barrels are being used, sewer demand is reduced and the water quality of streams and groundwater will improve.
Answer:
Cladius criticised Hamlet because He wanted Him to stop bringing up his father and Lamenting the death of His father. His reason for His criticism was because He was afraid that the more Hamlet talked about His father, The more likely people were to look into His death.
Explanation:
Claudius Had been lamenting the death of His father for some time and this made king Claudius uncomfortable. This made Claudius to give Him a speech to try and get him to stop talking about his father. King Claudius is very good with words as well as manipulative. He told Hamlet to be happy for his father, for He is now in heaven in His statement That his grief " shows a will most incorrect to heaven." but later in the play it was found out that the ghost is not in heaven but instead sufferring in "sulf'rous and tormenting flames.
Shakespeare uses the bones and structure of the myth as a base for the humor of this scene. He presents the mechanicals (Bottom and Quince, etc) as bad actors who don't know their parts very well, and who also have to improvise to create different elements of the myth. The wall and the moon, for instance, are played by actors rather than just being the inanimate objects that they are in the myth. The story is the same, the plot follows the same lines, but Shakespeare uses the inefficiency and inadequacy of the actors to create more of a ridiculous and humorous tone.
<span>The answer is C, it's definitely not b or d, that's for sure.</span>