Orange? I’m pretty sure the outcome of combining the colors would be orange
Answer:
Middle ages music originally had no rhythmic structure, but as the music became more complex, a need for rhythmic unity emerged. With this complexity came rhythmic notation. In the early middle ages, music was monophonic, meaning a single voice or melody line. As time passed, polyphony developed (multiple melodies).
Polyphony is really interesting and led to the highly complex polyphony of the Renaissance, and eventually to the fugues of the Baroque period.
Since you have provided no options, the best I can do is to describe lithography and hope that it helps:
In the first step, an image is drawn on a stone, typically with wax or oil. Then ink is spread on the whole stone, but it will not stay on the parts with oil or wax, only on the other parts. Then paper is pressed against the stone, and an image appears, because the ink adheres to the paper- you can then make multiple copies of the image.