Answer:
A. Casca firmly reverses his position about including Cicero, as if he hadn't been the one to suggest it in the first place
C. Casca thinks he is making important decisions when Brutus is really the one leading the way
Explanation:
The ironic thing about discussing whether or not to include Cicero in the conspiracy is that Casca firmly reverses his position about including Cicero, as if he hadn't been the one to suggest it in the first place and Casca thinks he is making important decisions when Brutus is really the one leading the way.
An action becomes ironic when the eventual outcome is different from the intended outcome.
After the Nazi invasion of the Netherlands in May
1940, the Dutch people were immediately faced
with the question of choice: how to respond to
the Nazi occupation. Tens of thousands of Dutch
people followed Hitler, and millions more looked
the other way. Eventually, a resistance movement
began to grow.
The Nazis needed Dutch collaborators to carry
out their fascist decrees. What would ha
I believe that distance plus sound equals the sound pressure level, but i could be wrong