False thanks Blake
She always relied on him for cooking!
Paul Cezanne's compositions relied on the use of basic shapes.
Beggers and vagabonds often employed various techniques to elicit sympathy and financial assistance from the wealthy. Common tactics included presenting themselves as victims of misfortune or illness, using exaggerated emotional appeals, or performing tricks and entertainment to attract attention. They sometimes created elaborate backstories to evoke compassion, while others relied on physical disabilities or the appearance of poverty to garner donations. The effectiveness of these methods hinged on their ability to connect with the emotions of those they approached.
Vincent Van Gogh mostly relied on his uncle Theo. Theo would do his bills, and taxes, and accompanied him. His uncle Theo got married, and moved away.
The word is correct as spelled: diary, for a personal journal. Example: Anne Frank's diary became a best-selling book after her death.
I Dont know go find it somewhere else
it is false
Television
In the past, classification relied on body structure, internal and external, as well as mode of reproduction. The change now is that scientists are using DNA to fine tune classification.
Saint Augustine.
Saint Augustine.
Saint Augustine.
It Was Relied To Salety It Was Relied To Salety It Was Relied To Salety It Was Relied To Salety It Was Relied To Salety
The updated classification of protists uses molecular data to group organisms based on evolutionary relationships, leading to a more accurate and comprehensive classification system. In contrast, the older classification relied heavily on morphological characteristics, resulting in some inaccuracies and uncertainties in the relationships between different protist groups. The new classification system has helped to clarify the diversity and evolutionary history of protists.
Back when classification was still in its early times, people would arbitrarily choose a certain characteristic on an organism and classify them according to that. This was called artificial classification, as it just relied on external characteristics. For example, Linnaeus's famous system of classification used the sexual organs or plants to classify them, ie, whichever plants had the same looking organs were classified together. Today, the evolutionary classification is more true, in the sense that organisms are actually classified by their evolutionary relationships, and are thus actually related and similar.
Aristotle's method of classification relied heavily on subjective interpretation and lacked a clear hierarchical structure. It also grouped organisms based on superficial similarities rather than underlying evolutionary relationships. Overall, his system did not account for the diversity and complexities found in nature.
Aristotle's classification scheme predated Linnaeus because it was based on observable physical characteristics and functional relationships, which were more accessible and understandable at that time. Linnaeus's classification scheme, on the other hand, relied on more advanced scientific knowledge, such as genetic relatedness and reproductive structures, which became prominent in the 18th century with the development of microscopy and other scientific tools.