It would actually depend on how the story would actually be depicted in this case. The verbs would then be how this man was describing this other man, and due to this, this would then be the way that this could have been the way that this would then be "intended".
        
             
        
        
        
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Fusion Jazz Dixieland Boogie Woogie Hot jazz Improvisational Music
 
        
             
        
        
        
The industrial revolution gave the black peppered moths an advantage of camouflage in its environment making it harder for predators to find. This is an adventageous trait. The white peppered moths were easier to find, making their population decrease.
        
             
        
        
        
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The Ancient Near East is the name given to early civilizations within a region roughly corresponding to the modern Middle East: Mesopotamia (modern Iraq and Syria), Persia (modern Iran), Anatolia (modern Turkey), the Levant (modern Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Palestine, and Jordan), and Ancient Egypt, from the rise of Sumer in the 4th millennium BCE until the region's conquest by Alexander the Great in the 4th century BCE, or covering both the Bronze Age and the Iron Age in the region. As such, it is a term widely used in the fields of Near Eastern archaeology, ancient history and Egyptology. Some would exclude Egypt from the ancient Near East as a geographically and culturally distinct area. However, because of Egypt's intimate involvement with the region, especially from the 2nd millennium BCE, this exclusion is rare.
The ancient Near East is considered the cradle of civilization. It was the first to practice intensive year-round agriculture; it gave the rest of the world the first writing system, invented the potter's wheel and then the vehicular- and mill wheel, created the first centralized governments, law codes and empires, as well as introducing social stratification, slavery and organized warfare, and it laid the foundation for the fields of astronomy and mathematics.
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¿Huh? I don’t get the question