HI or Hi may refer to: Hello‚ a greeting in the English language Hi and Lois‚ a comic strip Hi (kana)‚ Japanese character Hi (magazine)‚ teen lifestyle publication Hi Records‚ in music‚ a Memphis soul and rockabilly label Hi River‚ Ili River Hi territory‚ Yining City Hi‚ mobile phone brand of Dutch company KPN Hindi‚ an Indo-Aryan language (see list of ISO 639-1 codes) Hydrogen Index‚ the ratio hydrogen/carbon used in Van Krevelen diagrams by petroleum geologists for the assessment of kerogen
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performances and comic strips‚ both well-established mediums for storytelling. Theatre performers constantly change for respective plays‚ therefore the play can’t be faithfully replicated to multiple times and fail to meet Juul’s standards. With regards to comic books some‚ such as Marvel and DC comics‚ have multiple universes in which backstories are volatile and are irregular. This aggresses on Juul’s point that narrative has already happened and can’t be changed‚ whereas in this case some comic authors
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Surfacing in the 1950’s‚ pop art arose in Britain and America. By having images from popular culture‚ pop art challenges the traditions of fine art. Often taking images from advertising‚ logos and brand labels are extensively seen in pop art. An example of this would be Campbell’s Soup Cans‚ by Andy Warhol. Pop art in America used detached‚ normal reality‚ parody‚ and irony to eliminate the personal symbolism of abstract expressionism. Meanwhile‚ England used irony‚ but more academically. English
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fictional superhero team appearing in comic books published by Marvel Comics. The group debuted in The Fantastic Four #1 (November 1961)‚ which helped to usher in a new level of verisimilitude in the medium. The Fantastic Four was the first superhero team created by writer-editor Stan Lee and artist and co-plotter Jack Kirby‚ who developed a collaborative approach to creating comics with this title that they would use from then on. As the first superhero team title produced by Marvel Comics‚ it formed a cornerstone
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1. A ________ is a well-tested and widely accepted view that best explains certain scientific observations. Answer | | hypothesis | | | generalization | | | law | | | theory | 2 points Question 2 1. What are the basic differences between the disciplines of physical and historical geology? Answer | | physical geology is the study of fossils and sequences of rock strata; historical geology is the study of how rocks and minerals were used in the past |
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For thousands of years‚ humans relied on their intuition to understand how the world works. Sure‚ the approach may have led to a few mistakes along the way -- it turns out the Earth isn’t flat‚ for instance -- but ultimately it worked fairly well. Slowly but surely‚ humanity gained an understanding of everything from the laws of motion to thermodynamics‚ and all of it made intuitive sense. And then quantum mechanics came‚ the absolutely baffling branch of physics exploring the very smallest types
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Exploration Proposal I hope to explore the images of comic strips consumerism and symbolism in pop art that have been influenced in our everyday lives and how the mass media‚ advertising and popular culture are portrayed through pop art. One of the greatest iconic pop culture artists Andy Warhol suggests “I like boring things” this is a broad indication of a part of how pop culture is based on. It exposes how objects in everyday life can be right in front of us and we as people don’t think twice
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24 Ready-to-Go Genre Book Reports by Susan Ludwig S C H O L A S T I C PROFESSIONALBOOKS NEW YORK • TORONTO • NEW • LONDON • HONG • AUCKLAND KONG • • SYDNEY AIRES MEXICO CITY DELHI BUENOS 24 Ready-to-Go Genr Book Reports © Susan Ludwig‚ Scholastic Teaching Resources To Roger Scholastic Inc. grants teachers permission to photocopy the reproducible pages from this book for classroom use. No other part of this publication may be reproduced in whole or in
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1938‚ stories of superheroes—ranging from brief episodic adventures to continuing years-long sagas—have dominated American comic books and crossed over into other media. The word itself dates to at least 1917. A female superhero is sometimes called a superheroine (also rendered super-heroine or super heroine). "SUPER HEROES" is a trademark co-owned by DC Comics and Marvel Comics. By most definitions‚ characters do not strictly require actual superhuman powers to be deemed superheroes‚ although terms
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The engaging‚ alluring scent of the wildflowers on a farm matches that of fabric softener‚ expensive lotions‚ and fresh pinecones‚ but about 100 yards from this pleasing scent exists a rather smelly one that comes from the hog houses filled with the feces of a thousand pigs. When the noun smell becomes the adjective smelly‚ it changes the meaning-- changes it from an engaging alluring scent to a repulsive‚ vile one. This bad smell resembles the scents of Farty Fred‚ Pig-Pen‚ and David Smith.
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