How do Jesse's and Miles views about the spring differ?

Answers

Answer 1
Answer:
u posted this about a week ago week ago mess with us an then we twinken girl twinkin girl :)

Related Questions

Which Of Your Friends Are You Proudest Of? Why?What’s The Most Beautiful Place You’ve Ever Been?Do You Feel Like A Leader Or A Follower?When You’re Having A Bad Day, What Do You Do To Make Yourself Feel Better?What Is Your Favorite Wikipedia Article?
What is Stage Management?
How did patronage affect Beethoven’s work?
What are three colors that can be used to create a jungle illustration?​
if 18 inches is equal to 1 1/2ft how many feet long is a 36 inch board? A 72 inch board ? A 144 inch board?

Which term best describes a hypothesis?

Answers

A hypothesis is basically an educated guess that you make then you need to prove if its right or wrong... I hope this helps
i think the word think or your inference  or prediction

Which artist was known as the "King of Gospel”?. W.C. Handy
Thomas A. Dorsey
• Edwin Hawkins
O Rev. James Cleveland

Answers

Answer: James Cleveland

Explanation:

Happy (Belated) Halloween To Everyone! What did you dress up as?

Answers

I dressed up as a high school junior
I dressed up in my JROTC uniform for Halloween

Which statements about the life of William Morris are true?Choose all answers that are correct.

A.
He admired factory-made objects and made art only for wealthy people.

B.
Nature and medieval art inspired him, and he wrote poetry, prose, and about politics.

C.
He formed a company with other Oxford artists.

D.
He treated an entire house as a work of art.

E.
He began the Arts and Crafts Movement.

F.
His company created fine art objects by hand.

Answers

The statements true regarding the life of William Morris are that the Nature and medieval arts inspired him, and he wrote poetry, prose and about politics. He also formed a company with other Oxford artists. B,C,D and E are true.

William Morris treated an entire house as a work of art. He began the Arts and Crafts Movement. William Morris also created fine arts objects by hand. All the statements mentioned above are true.

William Morris

  • William Morris was an English artist who was famous for his various contributions to the arts and fine arts in the fields of textile arts, fine arts, architecture.

  • He was also a poet who would write poems, verses, prose and wrote about politics in his books. He influenced an entire millennial in the fields of arts and crafts.

  • William Morris is considered to be responsible for reviving the arts of European textile industry back on track with his famous styles and designs of textile arts.

  • William Morris was a professor at Oxford. During this time he formed a business organization in the form of a private company along with his other British artists in the university.

Hence, the statements true about William Morris' life are as the ones mentioned in B,C,D and E above.

To know more about William Morris, click the link below

brainly.com/question/7240493

Answer:

all options are correct except for A. He admired factory-made objects and made art only for wealthy people.

Explanation:

I just took the test

What is the last number

Answers

There is no last number. If anyone ever comes in and tells you that he has
the highest number, ask him to let you see it. When he shows it to you, take it,
and gently add '1 ' to it. That will give you a number that's bigger than his number,
which he thought was the highest one, but really isn't.
There is no last number ... becuz its infinite

Can someone check my answers please? According to Michael Faraday's World, which intrigued Michael Faraday?

*A.
magnets

B.
the tides

C.
volcanoes

D.
weather
<3
How are the operating room in the Williams story and the atom-splitting lab in the Fermi story alike?

A.
They are both places where computers do most of the work.

B.
They are both places where injured or sick people come for treatment.

C.
They are both places where people must remain silent.

*D.
They are both places where highly skilled people work.
<3
Which describes scientists?

A.
pessimistic

*B.
curious

C.
wealthy

D.
talkative
<3
Which best explains the difference between historical fiction and fact in a story?

A.
Historical fiction is always based on historical events, while facts do not relate to history.

B.
Historical fiction relates only to famous people, while facts can be about anyone.

*C.
Historical fiction includes imagined details that add dramatic interest, while facts are provable.

D.
Historical fiction includes details about people, while facts are about discoveries.
<3
Why does the author of Healing a Wounded Heart: Daniel Hale Williams note that, when Dr. Williams set up his medical practice, there were only three other black doctors in Chicago?

A.
He wants readers to understand that Williams had deep ties to the city of Chicago.

B.
He wants readers to know the names of each of these doctors.

*C.
He wants readers to realize that there were very few people like Williams.

D.
He wants readers to think about whether they'd like to become doctors one day, too.
<3
Which sentence from Nikola Tesla, Inventor is not strictly factual?

*A.
When he was still a young man, Tesla went to the United States to work for Thomas Edison in his New Jersey laboratory.

B.
If you had seen him striding down the street, though, you would never have thought that he spent most of his time building inventions in a laboratory.

C.
AC could travel over hundreds of miles of wire and still light a home.

D.
Tesla patented the first of his AC motors in 1890, and today nearly all electric motors are based on his invention.
<3
Why does the author of Enrico Fermi: The Italian Navigator begin the story by describing a strange telephone call that was made between Chicago and Cambridge, Massachusetts?

A.
to remind readers that some great discoveries are made completely by accident

*B.
to suggest to readers that there were people in America who wanted to see Fermi's experiments fail

C.
to show readers that, although Fermi was a serious scientist, he still had a charming sense of humor

D.
to help readers understand that Fermi's work was so important that it had to be kept top secret
<3
Read this passage from Marie Curie and the Discovery of Radioactivity:

To the Austrian mine owners who had sent the pitchblende ore, it was just dirt. After all, they had already taken out the valuable part—the metallic element called uranium—and dumped what was left over in a nearby pine forest. If a pair of eccentric French scientists wanted them to scoop up the worthless stuff and ship it, the mine owners were happy to oblige.

Why might the author have included these details?

*A.
to show that the Curies' scientific efforts and instincts were not initially understood or appreciated by many people

B.
to make clear that the Curies were more impoverished than any of their peers in Paris's scientific community

C.
to demonstrate that even great scientists like the Curies occasionally make very costly mistakes

D.
to suggest that the mine owners were dangerous individuals whose actions severely harmed the environment
<3
What conclusion can be drawn from the author's description of Michael Faraday creeping into the laboratory where he was to work with Sir Humphry Davy on his first night at the Royal Institution in Michael Faraday's World?

*A.
Faraday was eager to begin working with and learning from Davy.

B.
Davy insisted that Faraday not spend time in the lab alone.

C.
Davy preferred to work at night because it was quieter and there were fewer distractions.

D.
Faraday did not trust Davy, who had just fired his previous assistant.
<3
According to Healing a Wounded Heart: Daniel Hale Williams, why did Dr. Williams establish Provident Hospital?

*A.
He wanted to create a place where all people could receive treatment.

B.
He only wanted to care for African American patients.

C.
He knew that he could make a name for himself there.

D.
He was fired from the hospital where he once worked.
<3
What conclusion can be drawn about how the author of Nikola Tesla, Inventor views Nikola Tesla's peculiar personality?

A.
The author thinks that it was an act that Tesla did to gain the attention of others.

B.
The author believes that it makes Tesla an especially compelling figure.

*C.
The author thinks it actually made Tesla similar to many other famous scientists.

D.
The author thinks it prevented Tesla from making truly important scientific discoveries.

Answers

Answers:

1. (A) Magnets

Michael Faraday was a British scientist who devoted to the study of electromagnetism and electro chemistry. His principal findings include the principles underlying electromagnetic induction, diamagnetism and electrolysis. Although Faraday got little formal education, he was one of the most important scientists in history. It was by his research on the magnetic field around a conductor providing a direct current that Faraday discovered the basis for the concept of the electromagnetic field in physics.


2. (C) They are both places where people must remain silent.

Fermi was a physicist of exceptional renown who contributed in a most meaningful way to the defense and well-being of his chosen land and to the improvement of its rational well-being. His biggest achievement, the first supported nuclear chain reaction, took place in a tiny laboratory in Chicago.  


3. (B) Curious

A scientist is someone who leads scientific research to develop knowledge in an area of interest. In classical antiquity, there was no real ancient analogue of a modern scientist. Rather, philosophers involved in the philosophical study of nature called natural philosophy, a precursor of natural science. Scientist are curious by nature that's why they have the ability to discover.  


4. (C) Historical fiction includes imagined details that add dramatic interest, while facts are provable.  

Historical fiction is thought by many to be a genre best left in the domain of historians. Many of the biggest and greatest novels were written by historians who took the information they garnered from research and study. They build stories to relate those events and write the book so others can enjoy learning about history with a twist.



5. (C) He wants readers to realize that there were very few people like Williams.

First announced in 1989, Dan Allender's The Wounded Heart has served hundreds of thousands of people come to terms with physical abuse in their past. Now, more than twenty-five years later, Allender has written a brand-new book on the subject that takes into account recent discoveries about the lasting physical, emotional, relational, and spiritual consequences of sexual abuse.


6. (A) When he was still a young man, Tesla went to the United States to work for Thomas Edison in his New Jersey laboratory.

Factual is something that is true or concerned with original details or information rather than opinions or feelings about it. For instance,  claim that it was 20 degrees recently is an example of something that is factual as long as it is true.


7. (B) To suggest to readers that there were people in America who wanted to see Fermi's experiments fail

Enrico Fermi's great interest in physics was said to be the outcome of a family tragedy. When Enrico was 14, his beloved older brother, Giulio, died suddenly. To sympathise him, his parents supported his studies. He came across a couple of physics books written a half-century earlier and was completely enthralled. During his teens, he and friends carried physics experiments for fun, including testing the density of Rome's water supply.


8. (A) To show that the Curies' scientific efforts and instincts were not initially understood or appreciated by many people

Curie received a commission to lead research post-graduation and got lab space with Pierre Curie, a friend of a colleague.  Curie was investigating uranium rays when she made the claim the rays were not conditioned on the uranium's form, but on its atomic structure. Her theory created a new field of study, atomic physics, and Marie herself invented the phrase "radioactivity." But she was not been rewarded as per her contribution.


9. (A) Faraday was eager to begin working with and learning from Davy.

Faraday, who became one of the prominent scientists of the 19th century, started his career as a chemist. He wrote a guidebook of practical chemistry that reveals his knowledge of the technical features of his art, identified a number of new organic compounds, among them benzene, and was the first to liquefy a “permanent” gas. His main offering, however, was in the field of electricity and magnetism.


10. (A) He wanted to create a place where all people could receive treatment.

Dr. Williams who is famous for carrying the first open heart surgery ever, was a very kind person and he wanted to serve himself for the betterment of the mankind and this is the primary reason he joined the field of medicine, so that he could help everyone.


11. The author thinks it prevented Tesla from making truly important scientific discoveries.

Tesla’s impressive scientific work was well considered and carefully evaluated. About the epochal value of his discoveries in the area of electric technology much is known, but about the formation and dynamics of his interesting personality, however, very little is remembered and that little is not very trustworthy. Tesla’s personality is today yet enigmatic, surrounded by the veils of mystery.