Some good titles are “last breathe” “aquatic hope” “agua submerge” “it sinks” “floating hope” “river sink” “agua desperado” “death flow”
It would be D alphabets and numbers
Hi, you've asked a question that seems incomplete. However, I answered from a general musical perspective.
Answer:
<u> b. features melody followed by taqsim section.</u>
Explanation:
Note, the term Al-Shaghal is sometimes used to refer to a form of musical production that involves several musicians playing the same melody but in different styles, which is usually followed by a tasqsim section.
A tasqsim section often involves a form of musical expression used by Arabian musicians to express their emotions in the course of a musical performance.
I believe the correct answer is in contrast to Greek
temples, Roman temples usually had columns attached to the walls completely or
partly which makes a pseudo-peripteral structure.
Roman temples had a pseudo-peripteral structure rather than
peripteral structure that Greek temples had. The temple of pseudo-peripteral
structure has free standing columns in the front, but the columns along the
sides are engaged (attached partly or completely to the wall) in the peripheral
walls of the naos. For example, the Temple of Athena Nike and Temple of Venus
and Roma have this kind of structure.