Answer:
A drum kit is commonly described by the number of pieces it consists of. To work out how many ‘piece’ drum kit you have simply add up all the drums, ignoring cymbals and other hardware. Another method is to count the toms and then add 2 (for the snare and bass drum). So if your drum kit has 5 toms then it’s likely to be a 7 piece kit (assuming it has one snare drum and one bass drum). If a kit has one bass drum, one snare drum and one tom then it’s a 3 piece kit. The most common configuration is a 5 piece kit consisting of a bass drum, snare drum and 3 toms (high, mid and low) – and then of course you also have the hi-hats, cymbals etc. but these don’t count towards the number of ‘pieces’. You could have a 5 piece kit with 100 cymbals – it’s still a 5 piece kit.
Explanation:
Answer:
sorry but i like poems, dont know that word btw, again sorry.
Explanation:
Always had a feeling
My mind was
always reeling.
I always had
these thoughts,
everything seemed so sad.
It kinda made me mad.
Never did you think
i would be like this,
even in a wink.
I just want
to fight
all of this.
Never had the right.
Always in the dark.
Never saw the light
always was the shadow
even in the night,
couldn't see light
and that didn't feel right.
I wanna make this happen.
All i want is to be
free.
Negative space enclosed by letterforms is called counters.
Negative space is white space that letters such as O or D have (enclosed white space within the letter). Well, in typography, that white/negative space is called a counter, or aperture, or inner space, or enclosed space.
Their brilliance and their gloss I think...