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Rudik [331]
3 years ago
12

I need this now ASAP

English
1 answer:
goldfiish [28.3K]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

here you go

Explanation:

Ded Moroz

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Define ' open depth of field ' in your own words
Liono4ka [1.6K]

Depth of field is the distance between the closest and farthest objects in a photo that appears acceptably sharp. Now your camera can only focus sharply at one point. But the transition from sharp to unsharp is gradual, and the term 'acceptably sharp' is a loose one!
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The lion king is loosely based on which play by william shakespeare?
gregori [183]

Answer:

Hamlet.

Explanation:

Hope this helps!

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2 years ago
What should you do if you have trouble understanding a passage even after reading it slowly?
Alchen [17]
LOL these answer choices though. The second answer - look words up - is correct. DO write things down. Backwards? And reading *faster* certainly won't help.
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3 years ago
Match the lines in the poem with the themes they represent.
Varvara68 [4.7K]

<u>Answer:</u>

There passed, as a shroud  

A fleecy cloud,  

And I turned away to thee, - The night is changeable

I gazed awhile.  

On her cold smile;  

Too cold—too cold for me— - Moonlight can be uninviting

And dearer thy beam shall be;  

For joy to my heart  

Is the proud part

Thou bearest in Heaven at night, - Stars evoke wonder

<u>Explanation:</u>

In this poem, <u>"Evening Star" by Edgar Allen Poe</u>, a fleecy cloud passing by the moon at night changes the view of the speaker. His gaze falters and he turns away from the "cold smile" of the moon to look at the evening star. This could represent how the night is changeable in its views, how things are constantly moving and changing- every slight passing of a cloud, variation in the moonlight, appearance of the stars, their positions, etc. It could also represent how the changing night changed the speaker's gaze.

The speaker doesn't connect to moon well and calls her smile "cold", "too cold," and despite it being brighter than the stars, calls her moonlight "pale" and "lowly." He describes the moon as residing among her "slaves"- the planets, and presents the moon in an image of coldness and arrogance. Hence, moonlight, for him, is uninviting.

The speaker's heart is filled with joy when he looks at the evening star. He says that the beam of the star is "dearer" to him even if it is so far away. His affection towards it is all the more because of the distance, despite which its light reaches him, and the significant part the star has in the night sky or the "Heaven," according to him. He admires and prefers its "distant fire." All this adds to the sense of how the stars evoke wonder by the virtue of their light, distance, position and personal significance to the speaker.

3 0
4 years ago
To cite a website in the text of your work and link it to the entry in works cited, use the author's _______.
Marianna [84]
I think the first answer choice is correct.
4 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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