D. I mean think about it, the farmers want the land right? They died and lived off of it so they want whoever is trying to take it away to see how much they need it.. Go with it fam, and try to understand. Also...use a dictionary.
the conversation during meal , the battle of Vicksburg relate to Annie not willing to give up on getting through to Helen . keller make reference of the battle in an effort to convince Annie that she should give up to trying to teach Helen anything and just accepted defeat
The Tribal Assembly<span> or </span>Assembly of the People<span> (</span>comitia populi tributa<span>) of the </span>Roman Republic<span> was an assembly consisting of all Roman citizens convened by the tribes (tributim). During the </span>Roman Republic<span>, citizens were organized on the basis of 35 </span>tribes: four urban tribes of the citizens in the city of Rome, and 31 rural tribes of citizens outside the city. The tribes gathered in the Tribal Assembly to vote on legislative, judicial and electoral matters. Each tribe voted separately and one after the other. In each tribe, decisions were made by majority vote and its decision counted as one vote regardless of how many electors each tribe held. Once a majority of tribes voted in the same way on a given measure, the voting ended and the matter was decided.[1]<span> The president of the Tribal Assembly was usually either a "</span>consul" or a "praetor<span>"</span>
it’s C because elections are held every two years
Answer:
Orsino, the lovesick duke of Illyria, speaks these lines. He introduces the audience to the theme of love as overpowering and fickle. He calls sweet music the "food of love" and wants "an excess of it" so that he can satisfy his appetite for it. However, when the music is no longer sweet, Orsino compares it to the sea. Like the sea, it engulfs everything and debases its value to a "low price." He concludes that love can change from sweet music to an engulfing sea in a matter of one minute. He also suggests that it shifts shape at whim. The fickleness of love reflects Orsino's own inconstant nature, casting him as self-indulgent and melodramatic. Finally, because Orsino never names the object of his love in these opening lines, the emotional outpouring indicates that Orsino is consumed more by the idea of love than by love for Olivia.
Explanation: