Answer:
1. Option F: Worker Safety
2. Option A:be short and direct as possible to be efficient
Explanation:
A cafeteria kitchen should be as safe as possible. This is because in such a busy environment as this, the safety of workers can be put at risk due to high risk equipment such as gas stoves, burners, lighters etc. Therefore, the design of the kitchen should have the worker safety in mind first. Of course, the while kitchen should be safe for all the workers to work in there.
The circulation patterns should be as short and easily accessible. This makes it possible for the workers to access emergency equipment and emergency routes such as the emergency exit etc. In addition, it reduces unnecessary movement.
Answer:
Strophe
Explanation:
section of a poem or lyric text generally of a set number of lines and line length; a text may have multiple strophes Strophic – musical form in which all verses or strophes of a song are sung to the same music Syllabic – music in which each syllable of a text is set to one musical note Verse and Refrain
Answer:
you press the crown by their answer like if two ppl answer it there will be a crown beside the question
Explanation:
Answer:
Of all the Impressionist artists, Renoir in particular changed his style in the 1880s. He came to believe that his work was too focused on the present time, meaning Paris in the 1880s. He worried that future viewers would not be interested in his art because it would become irrelevant. He therefore began painting subjects that were more "timeless," as opposed to scenes that were clearly set in present-day Paris. In contrast to his earlier works, like Le Moulin de la Galette, or other Impressionist works, like Manet's A Bar at the Folies-Bergere, Renoir's later works do not feature subjects that are so obviously late-19th century Parisians.
Explanation:
The Bathers is an excellent example of this shift in Renoir's works. The women are more classical in appearance. While they could be 19th century Parisian women on the banks of the Seine (the river that runs through Paris), since they are undressed they are difficult to place definitively in time. The painting has other features that are also indicative of a change in Renoir's style. The figures are rendered with much more detail; in contrast to Le Moulin de la Galette, it is clear that Renoir focused more on carefully painting the figures in The Bathers, rather than painting quickly as in the earlier work. Still, the background retains the Impressionist style of quick, rough brushstrokes, and the bright colors are also typical of Impressionist art. Although The Bathers shows a move away from the original tenets of Impressionism, it retains enough of the style to still be considered an Impressionist work.