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Helen [10]
3 years ago
14

Why does music written in a minor key sound "sad" or "downbeat," while music in a major key sounds "happy" or "upbeat"?

English
1 answer:
dangina [55]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

omg i can answer thx for free points!!

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1. Sadie's backyard was a regular Garden of Eden. The property was filled
Nookie1986 [14]

Answer:

Allusion.

Explanation:

An allusion is a figurative language where the speaker refers to a particular thing without explicitly stating it. In other words, the act of referring to something without directly stating it is known as an allusion.

In the given sentence, the allusion is in the "Garden of Eden." It is a biblical allusion, from the book of Genesis where the first man and woman were kept before being thrown out by God. The speaker alludes to this Garden with that of Sadie's.

Thus, the correct answer is an allusion.

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Question 1. We paid through the_________ to get the car fixed.<br> A. head B. nose C. lips D. mouth
maw [93]

Answer:

I Think money

Explanation:

because you need lot of money

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3 years ago
I need some info on jelly fish if you wouldnt mind helping me out. :)
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What is your impression of Churchill's sentence? Does it seem correct or incorrect? Does it sound like a good sentence or not? W
storchak [24]

Answer:

the one the question is refering to.

The writing 'rule' (myth) Churchill's reply satirizes is the 'Never end a sentence on a preposition' rule (i.g. as I intetionally did on the immediate sentence before this one). And his reply to it was something like 'This is the type of errant pedantry up with which I will not put.'

The 'rule' is a myth, yes, but of course what Churchill did was an exaggeration to sneeringly point out the ignorance of those who criticized him.

His sentence therefore was incorrect. One possible change to improve it could be: 'This is the type of errant pedantry which I will not put up with.'

Specially the 'up' and 'with' of 'put up with' could never go in the middle of a sentence, as 'put up with' is a phrasal verb, meaning the verb and the preposition must always be together in the correct order.

I was able to find some possible variations of what his sentence could have actually had been, but in none of them the 'up with' goes along with 'put', so either ways we can assume that his sentence was deliberately wrong.

Explanation:

brainly

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3 years ago
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leonid [27]
I can do it but by when
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