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guajiro [1.7K]
3 years ago
6

Does anyone know what this is?

Arts
1 answer:
s344n2d4d5 [400]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

fitbit  because it the other half of it

Explanation:

need to explan because its is a fitbit

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Peaceful farming scenes
Roman55 [17]

Answer:

Answer

Explanation:

The bracing gust of wind gently blows over the fields of emerald green grass. The morning dew settling on the spiders web in the corner of the pasture fence. Large peaceful cows are grazing slowly in the fields, their grand big hooves slowing moving to fresh new grass.

Hope this helped.

6 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Who commissioned most of the work during this time period?
kirill115 [55]

Answer:

the papacy

Explanation:

Considering the Renaissance Period: The term "Renaissance Popes" means the pontiffs who ruled the Church in the time of Humanism. They favored the arts in general. The popes of this period were: Nicholas V (1447-1455), Calixto II (1455-1458), Pius II (1458-1464) Paul II (1464-147l) Sixto IV (1471-1484), Innocent VIII (1484-1492) ), Alexander VI (1492-1503), Pius III (1503), Julius II (1503-1513) and Leo X (1513-1521). This series of popes was glorious from a human and Renaissance point of view. Unfortunately the same cannot be said in the moral and ecclesiastical aspect. Many have endeavored to support the arts, yet forgetting to renew Church discipline and other more urgent needs.

courtesy of debmagnani

brainly.com/profile/debmagnani-16393485

4 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
I did not call myself a poet I told people I wrote poems. Where can a semicolon be added to this sentence?
ss7ja [257]

After the word poet.

"I did not call myself a poet; I told people I wrote poems."

4 0
3 years ago
In the course of the construction of the Bridge a number of lives have been lost. Does it not sometimes seem as though every wor
tatyana61 [14]

Answer:

b, aka The mayor thanks the many people who worked on the bridge.

Explanation:

8 0
3 years ago
Name the 9 fundamental terms used to describe typefaces
MaRussiya [10]

(((((PLZ give me brainliest this took so long to do)))))) I did 11 so you could choose

01. Font/Typeface:

typography-terms-1

Back in the days of metal type and printing presses, fonts and typefaces were two different things — the typeface was the specific design of the letters, say Times New Roman or Baskerville; while the font referred to the particular size or style of that typeface, say 10 point regular or 24 point italic (each created as its own collection of cast metal letters and other characters). Today, however, many designers use the terms more or less interchangeably. The best and most straightforward modern definition I’ve run across (courtesy of Fontshop) goes as follows:

“A collection of letters, numbers, punctuation, and other symbols used to set text (or related) matter. Although font and typeface are often used interchangeably, font refers to the physical embodiment (whether it’s a case of metal pieces or a computer file) while typeface refers to the design (the way it looks). A font is what you use, and a typeface is what you see.”

02. Character:

typography-terms-2

An individual symbol of the full character set that makes up a typeface; may take the form of a letter, number, punctuation mark, etc.

03. Alternate Character / Glyph:

typography-terms-3

A non-standard (sometimes decorative) variation of a character that comes as an extra option with a font file.

04. Serif:

typography-terms-4

A short line or stroke attached to or extending from the open ends of a letterform; also refers to the general category of typefaces that have been designed with this feature.

05. Sans-Serif / Sans:

typography-terms-5

Literally “without line”; the general category of typefaces (or an individual typeface) designed without serifs.

06. Italic:

typography-terms-6

A slanted version of a typeface (slants from left to right); a true italic is uniquely designed, more than a tilted version of the upright (a.k.a. “roman”) typeface.

The Foundation: Positioning & Spacing

07. Baseline:

typography-terms-7

The imaginary line on which most letters and other characters sit.

08. Cap Line:

typography-terms-8

The imaginary line that marks the upper boundary of capital letters and some lowercase letters’ ascenders (see Ascender definition in the next section).

09. X-Height:

typography-terms-9

The height of a typeface’s lowercase letters (disregarding ascenders and descenders).

10. Tracking / Letter-Spacing:

typography-terms-10

The uniform amount of spacing between characters in a complete section of text (sentence, line, paragraph, page, etc.).

11. Kerning:

typography-terms-11

The horizontal spacing between two consecutive characters; adjusting the kerning creates the appearance of uniformity and reduces gaps of white space between certain letter combinations.

4 0
3 years ago
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