Answer:
By studying entrepreneurship and innovation, you can learn the underlying principles of starting a business, avoid common pitfalls, pitch ideas more effectively, validate your product, develop a solid business model, and set yourself up for success in a field where failure is common.
Answer: See explanation
Explanation:
There was once a fortune teller who was known for always giving right predictions. The emperor invited him Once an Emperor invited him to his court and them gave him horoscope telling the fortune teller to tell him about his future.
After studying the horoscope, the fortune teller told the Emperor about the good things he saw and the emperor was really happy.
Then, the fortune-teller told the Emperor about the negative things and the misfortunes he'll face. This got the Emperor angry and he told the fortune teller to check the horoscope to know when the fortune teller will die.
The fortune-teller was clever and he knew that the Emperor wanted to kill him. He then said that the king was going to die the following day that he's dead. The Emperor changed his mind on hearing what the fortune teller said. He admired the clever reply by the fortune teller and gave him gifts.
Poe has a great talent to expose the development of madness in people--a condition not discussed in private or in public during his time. Today, awareness for different mental illnesses is common and often looked upon with compassion. In Poe's day as well as today, however, the process through which a person turns mad is interesting, intense, and suspenseful in and of itself. One might ask how a person gets to the point of overwhelming madness or loss of self-control. Poe uses this curious process as the background for "The Raven."
Along with the use of an intense and confusing scene, Poe uses the techniques of repetition, alliteration and rhythm to bring about the madman's process towards loss of self-control. Words that are repeated often are: "Lenore," the symbol of his emotional pain; "chamber door," the focus of audible irritation; and the bird's unsatisfying response, "Nevermore." Examples of alliteration that create the repetition of maddening sounds are: "While I nodded, nearly napping"; "Perched upon the bust of Pallas"; and, "Startled at the stillness." Finally, the rhythm of the rhyme scheme (trochaic octameter) seems to remind one of a spastic rhythm that can't quite be grasped or understood fully as Poe does not finish some lines' meter but does finish others. Here, Poe creates chaos that the character and reader alike cannot align or make sense of. Through these techniques, confusion and chaos are maintained throughout the drunken period of grief that the main character travels through. The raven then becomes the most confusing symbols of death and chaos in literature as seen through a madman's maddening state of mind.
Answer:
Heliocentric, Sun
Explanation:
Ptolemy believed in the Geocentric theory, the theory that everything in the universe revolved around the Earth (the root Geo is indicative of Earth). Copernicus believed in the theory of Heliocentrism, the theory that everything revolved around the Sun (the root Helio is indicative of Sun).
*neither are accurate based on modern scientific knowledge, however Copernicus's was closest to being factual*