Answer:
Hey there! you're answer would be...
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(B) 10. If you use more, then you might get accused of plagiarism or of not saying anything your own at all.
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If you have any questions feel free too ask me, have a lovely day.
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The answer in my view would be C. If im wrong im so srry
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Producers, or autotrophs, make their own organic molecules. Consumers, or heterotrophs, get organic molecules by eating other organisms. A food chain is a linear sequence of organisms through which nutrients and energy pass as ... When we're talking about their role in food chains, we can call autotrophs producers.
Energy must constantly flow through an ecosystem for the system to remain stable. What exactly does this mean? Essentially, it means that organisms must eat other organisms. Food chains (Figure below) show the eating patterns in an ecosystem. Food energy flows from one organism to another. Arrows are used to show the feeding relationship between the animals. The arrow points from the organism being eaten to the organism that eats it. For example, an arrow from a plant to a grasshopper shows that the grasshopper eats the leaves. Energy and nutrients are moving from the plant to the grasshopper. Next, a bird might prey on the grasshopper, a snake may eat the bird, and then an owl might eat the snake. The food chain would be:
plant → grasshopper → bird → snake → owl.
A food chain cannot continue to go on and on. For example the food chain could not be:
plant → grasshopper → spider → frog → lizard → fox → hawk.
Food chains only have 4 or 5 total levels. Therefore, a chain has only 3 or 4 levels for energy transfer.
How do the grasshopper and the grass interact?
Grasshoppers don't just hop on the grass. They also eat the grass. Other organisms also eat the grass, and some animals even eat the grasshopper. These interactions can be visualized by drawing a food web.
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Hope this answer helps you :)
Have a great day
Mark brainliest
Answer:
This book has it all: romance, death, harrowing journeys, miraculous feats. If you're not quite sure which genre best fits Le Morte D'Arthur, then the title, which means "The Death of Arthur," should give you a clue. A story about how feuding, adultery, and a king's son bring down the kingdom he's worked so long and hard to build? That sure sounds like a tragedy to us.
Yet Le Morte isn't just the story of how the kingdom falls; it's also the tale of how it's built. A big part of that story are the tales of Arthur's knights, who journey all over the land risking life and limb to rescue damsels from dragons, win more subjects for Arthur, evade wicked sorcerers, settle legal disputes, win glory in jousts… the list goes on and on, and that makes this story an adventure.
Sometimes, Arthur's knights embark on adventures with a specific goal in mind, like when Gareth sets out to rescue the lands of the Lady Lyonet from an evil knight who's besieging them, or when all of Arthur's knights embark on a journey to catch a glimpse of the Holy Grail. In the course of these adventures, the knights learn some stuff about themselves. Gareth proves that he's got what it takes to be a knight worthy of his family name; Launcelot realizes that all the time he's spent thinking about Gwenyvere makes him unfit for an adventure during which he should be devoting himself to God instead. We call these goal-oriented adventures involving self-discovery quests, and they make up a huge part of Le Morte D'Arthur as well.
D, pathos triggers and is all about emotions and feelings.