Answer:
Despite the slightly frightening description if you think about it, its dead accurate. Forgive me for the Martin Luther King moment but I have a dream, except my dream is much easier to peruse than Martin's dream and Its implied to all people. My dream is that every person who uses technology will think while he's using it. Let me explain, Technology in the bottom line, is a freaking tool. Used by us humans, you and me. We give it life and fuel it or we can use it as a byproduct. Every one of us have the option to do something we normally forget to do, which is to Think! Think before we post, before we upload, before we even choose to look at our phones, before we take pictures of everything, Just think. Don't throw stones if you live in a glass house or better yet don't live in a glass house. Your choice.
Explanation:
Answer:
1) solid 2) Water to steam - Water is vaporized when it is boiled on the stove to cook some pasta, and much of it forms into a thick steam. Water evaporates - Water evaporates from a puddle or a pool during a hot summer's day.
Answer: The order is:
- Maximum Ride: The Angel Experiment
- Maximum Ride: School's Out Forever
- Maximum Ride: Saving the World and Other Extreme Sports
- Maximum Ride: The Final Warning
- MAX: A Maximum Ride Novel
- Fang: A Maximum Ride Novel
- Angel: A Maximum Ride Novel
- Nevermore: The Final Maximum Ride Adventure
- Maximum Ride Forever
Explanation:
<em>Maximum ride</em> is a series of young adult fantasy novels. The books were written by James Patterson, an American author who is, apart from this series, most famous for his series about detective Alex Cross.
Maximum Ride is set in the near future, and features the Flock family of human-avian hybrids, who are 98% human and 2% bird.
The first book in the series, <em>The Angel Experiment</em>, was released in 2005. In the book, the group of human-avian hybrids runs away from the people who had created them.
<em>Maximum Ride Forever</em> remains the final book in the series, as advertised in 2015 when it was issued. The story is set in the post-apocalyptic world, where the Flock splits up in an attempt to find survivors.
Hello. You forgot to show the text and answer options. Both are set out below.
In 2002, astronomers using Hubble noted that the abundance of high-altitude clouds increased the planet's brightness from observations made in the late 1990s. Astronomers consider this brightness increase a sign of seasonal change. Hubble studies show that Neptune has a nearly constant brightness at low latitudes (near the equator). This supports the idea that the observed changes are seasonal in nature, because seasonal effects would be minimal near the equator and most evident at high latitudes.
A. to prove how scientists were able to confirm that Neptune has recurring weather
B. to suggest that Neptune is similar to Earth in terms of weather patterns
C. to demonstrate how scientists were able to conclude that Neptune has clouds like Earth
D. to introduce the idea that Neptune is similar to other planets in the galaxy
Answer:
A. to prove how scientists were able to confirm that Neptune has recurring weather
Explanation:
The text presents how scientists came to the conclusion that Neptune is a planet that has seasonal changes, similar to the earth, but with a different time interval between them. The text also shows that it is possible to observe these seasonal changes with the increase in the latitude at which the planet is observed, which reinforces the idea that, on this planet, the climate is recurrent, according to seasonality.
Answer:
Primary boycott
Explanation:
Primary boycott is a form of organized protest that is being done by cutting the flow of consumers toward a certain company. This is aimed to eliminate company's income until they're willing to have a conversation with the protesters.
This can be done by forcing the members of the group to stop purchasing a certain product, influence the public to purchase the company's product, or in a certain capacity physically prevented the customers from entering the business establishment (such as chaining themselves up in the company's front door)