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dybincka [34]
3 years ago
11

There are many people in the world already projecting that the lack of water will reach a very critical level in not a so distan

t future. Do you agree with them why or why not?
English
1 answer:
Iteru [2.4K]3 years ago
8 0
They lack water because they don’t have water sources around them
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Daniel [21]

Sophia is using an antonym to make an analogy.

<h3>What do you understand by analogy?</h3>

A comparison of two entities that are otherwise dissimilar based on how similar they are to one another 1: Resemblance is the similarity of two objects that are otherwise dissimilar. 2: the suggestion that if two or more items concur in some areas, they probably concur in other areas as well.

The best examples are widely recognized. They describe an abstract idea using a well-known concept. The odometer and speedometer on a car are good examples of a function and its derivative because we all know how speedometers operate but perhaps not calculus.

type analogies

comparisons between causes and effects.

comparisons of an object and its use.

Synonyms.

Antonyms.

Analogies from products to sources.

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2 years ago
Is conflict a natural part of the human experience? Explain.
balandron [24]
The instinct of conflict comes from the deep characteristic of jealousy. As human we are coded with the virus of unfair or disadvantaged jealousy. Our instinct is to despise something or someone in a greater position than I. From this characteristic is the rising concern of conflict. Conflict is the term applied to a justified jealousy where we as human see an unjust however the unjust is significant, a source to take action
6 0
4 years ago
A word-processed rsum designed to be visually appealing is a _______.
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3 years ago
Include your introduction paragraph from your introduction lesson. Write three body paragraphs for your article. Write a topic s
luda_lava [24]
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4 0
4 years ago
Which fact indicates that, despite efforts to serve the poor, major class distinctions remained in Victorian London?
sashaice [31]

oday it is somewhat of a cliché to say that Christmas as we know it in Britain was either invented or largely created by the Victorians. In fact, historians never seem to tire of debating the role of the Victorians in forming our modern concept of the Christmas celebration. Was it invention or re-invention? Was it an act of myth-making or simply a case of repackaging older traditions in a form that suited their modern age and appealed to the general mood?

There is ample evidence, as well as many good scholarly arguments and critical studies, to convince us that the latter is probably closer to the truth. Christmas, as we know it today, is essentially a nineteenth-century mixture of all that was best and most popular from English Christmases past, continually tempered by new sensibilities, ideas and prevailing concerns. What is surprising is that much of this repackaging and revivification was vigorously undertaken early in Victoria’s reign, during the 1840s – in the first full decade of her  monarchy and her marriage. Why was this period historically significant in the story of Christmas? And what were the foundations upon which this ‘new’ Christmas was constructed?

The answer lies, in part, in the reaction to the social changes that  threatened the middle classes. Increasing urbanisation in England  had brought about high concentrations of poverty, overcrowding, insanitary conditions and disease. The middle classes were perhaps more vulnerable to the threats posed by urbanisation and the poor owing to proximity in the city and the insecurity arising from often similar social backgrounds, than the upper classes who were at some remove. To protect themselves, the early Victorian middle classes built a world of strict moral codes and strong religious beliefs, with an emphasis on hard work and achievement. This was underpinned by the idea of the family as the most acceptable social unit and so the type of Christmas the Victorians fashioned reinforced all their social and moral beliefs. The middle classes almost used it as an exercise in social engineering, to encourage others to be equally moral and upright, even though they might be less fortunate. Christmas also provided a cultural anchor, a life raft of familiarity in changing times.

Christmas as the celebration of the birth of Christ was integrated with an already established festival over which the Church itself had remarkably little influence. As a cultural festival, its influences were many and although in the 1840s the Christian faith was an important part of the season, Christmas, then as now, seems to have been a festival of family and kinship in which charity toward others was perhaps the strongest element.

There was undoubtedly a growing interest in the history and traditions of Christmas during this period. This can be seen as part of a larger trend of the late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth centuries to examine and understand English history in a new way. The nation’s history became of interest not just to antiquarians but to a wider public. The preceding centuries were useful not only as a mirror in which those in the nineteenth century could see and understand themselves but also provided a fertile picking ground for historical role models. A ‘magpie’ approach was employed as selected elements of Christmas across the ages were considered suitable for adaptation. The Christmas-makers of the early-nineteenth century were attempting to create a festival – to reflect a society – that was better, morally and socially, than the immediate past. For this reason they were highly selective about which ‘past’ suited their purpose, and the result was an eclectic mix of the traditional and modern.

In this constructed idea of festivity, the immediate past seemed not to appeal. A common perception was that the Regency period had lacked substance, was cold-hearted and characterised by unbalanced excess and overspending. Christmas during this period was viewed as having become a soulless shadow of what it had once been. Something more robust, both morally and in terms of sheer celebration, was required. The medieval and, in particular, the Elizabethan periods provided the most suitable models. ‘Olde Christmas’ was perceived as a vigorous, heartfelt festival, which struck the right balance between hedonistic pleasures and an awareness of communal relationships and responsibilities. The celebrations of the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries were considered to have been both morally sound and 

7 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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