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Science slay
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Slay a Dragon
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Numeracy development (not slay)
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Artemisia
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SOS PARODY
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Mythology class 10/21 notes
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Greek Mythology Midterm #2
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beowulf
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Beowulf Review
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Untitled Flashcards Set
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Aztec Creation Myth Notes
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Flashcards (388)
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Slav 50 Final
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Grand slam (Tennis)
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HAP 4 Slay Exam
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Visual & Technical Codes • Camera Angles: • Low Angle: Makes the subject look powerful, heroic, or intimidating. • High Angle: Makes the subject look vulnerable, small, or insignificant. • Canted/Dutched Angle: A tilted shot used to suggest unease, madness, or a world out of balance. • Camera Shots: • Extreme Close-Up (ECU): Focuses on a specific detail (eyes, a product logo) to create intense emotion or focus. • Establishing Shot: Usually a Wide Shot at the start to show the setting/context. • Lighting & Color: • High-Key Lighting: Bright and even; used in upbeat ads (perfume, tech) to suggest happiness or clarity. • Low-Key Lighting: Shadows and contrast; suggests mystery, drama, or "gritty" realism. • Color Palette: Warm tones (reds/yellows) suggest comfort or passion; cool tones (blues) suggest clinical precision or sadness. Audio Codes • Diegetic Sound: Sound that exists within the world of the media (e.g., a character speaking, a car door slamming). • Non-Diegetic Sound: Sound added for the audience only (e.g., a dramatic musical score, an omniscient voice-over). • Sound Bridge: When the audio from one scene carries over into the next, creating a link between ideas. Editing & Mise-en-Scène • Continuity Editing: Making the story flow naturally so the audience doesn't notice the cuts. • Jump Cuts: Sudden breaks in time; used in music videos to create energy or a "frenetic" feel. • Mise-en-Scène: Everything in the frame (Props, Costume, Expression, Setting). • Example: A "messy bedroom" mise-en-scène in Submarine tells us about Oliver's internal chaos without saying a word. 2. Core Theorists for Section A You don't need a million theories, just 3-4 that you can apply to anything
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Final Exam - Slav 276
528
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2026 Slais Autentico 2 5A
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Nina's SLAY Words
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Updated 19d ago
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# SSUSH 1–19 Study Guide (Quizlet Style) ## SSUSH 1–5: Colonization, Revolution, and Constitution Southern Colonies - Established mainly to create wealth for England - Economy based on cash crops like tobacco and rice - Used enslaved labor New England Colonies - Founded mostly for religious freedom - Economy based on trade, fishing, and shipbuilding - Small farms and towns Trans-Atlantic Trade - Trade network between Europe, Africa, and the Americas - Included enslaved Africans and cash crops - Helped colonies grow wealthy Mercantilism - Economic system where colonies existed to benefit the mother country - Colonies sent raw materials to England - England sold finished goods back Intolerable Acts - Laws passed by Britain after Boston Tea Party - Punished Massachusetts - Increased colonial anger toward Britain Declaration of Independence - Written mainly by Thomas Jefferson - Declared independence from Britain - Said people can overthrow abusive governments Three-Fifths Compromise - Enslaved persons counted as 3/5 of a person for representation - Increased Southern power in Congress Shays’ Rebellion - Farmer rebellion in Massachusetts - Showed Articles of Confederation was too weak - Led to calls for stronger central government Thomas Paine / Common Sense - Argued independence was necessary - Convinced many colonists war was unavoidable Treaty of Paris (1783) - Ended Revolutionary War - Britain recognized U.S. independence - Made future U.S. expansion possible Federalists vs Anti-Federalists - Federalists wanted stronger central government - Anti-Federalists feared too much national power - Debate led to Bill of Rights Standing Army Debate - Federalists wanted army for defense - Anti-Federalists feared army could threaten liberty --- ## SSUSH 6–10: New Nation, Sectionalism, Civil War, Reconstruction Election of 1800 - Thomas Jefferson defeated John Adams - Criticism of Sedition Act hurt Federalists - Peaceful transfer of power Sedition Act - Made criticism of government illegal - Hurt Federalists politically Marbury v. Madison - Established judicial review - Supreme Court can declare laws unconstitutional Monroe Doctrine - Warned Europe to stay out of Western Hemisphere - U.S. opposed new colonization in the Americas Louisiana Purchase - Bought from France in 1803 - Doubled size of U.S. - Opened West to settlement Second Great Awakening - Religious revival movement - Inspired reform movements Reform Movements - Abolition - Women’s rights - Education reform - Temperance - Goal: improve society James K. Polk - Expanded U.S. territory - Annexed Texas - Settled Oregon boundary - Won Mexican Cession Sectionalism - Differences between North and South increased - North = industry - South = agriculture/slavery Civil War North Advantages - More railroads - More factories - Larger population Civil War South Advantages - Better military leaders - Fought defensive war Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address - Focused on healing the nation - Called for unity after Civil War Freedmen’s Bureau - Helped formerly enslaved people - Provided food, education, and aid Reconstruction Amendments - 13th: ended slavery - 14th: citizenship and equal protection - 15th: voting rights for Black men --- ## SSUSH 11–19: Industrialization to World War II Railroad Expansion - Helped settle the West - Increased trade and movement - Led to conflict with American Indians Plains Indians - Resisted westward expansion - Forced onto reservations by U.S. government Transcontinental Railroad - Connected East and West - Built heavily by immigrants Ellis Island - Immigration station in New York - Processed many European immigrants Standard Oil / John D. Rockefeller - Used horizontal integration - Bought smaller companies - Created monopoly Labor Unions - Formed because of long hours, low wages, unsafe conditions - Fought for workers’ rights Plessy v. Ferguson - Established “separate but equal” - Allowed segregation and Jim Crow laws World War I Causes - Militarism - Alliances - Imperialism - Nationalism Unrestricted Submarine Warfare - German U-boats attacked ships - Helped cause U.S. entry into WWI Harlem Renaissance - African American cultural movement in 1920s - Literature, music, art flourished 19th Amendment - Gave women the right to vote Great Depression - Began with stock market crash in 1929 - Massive unemployment and poverty Eugene V. Debs - Criticized U.S. involvement in WWI - Punished under Espionage Act New Deal - Roosevelt’s programs to fight Depression - Relief, Recovery, Reform Second New Deal - Focused on long-term reform - Included Social Security Act Social Security Act - Helped elderly, unemployed, disabled - Long-term economic reform Dust Bowl - Caused by drought + poor farming practices - Forced migration west Manhattan Project - Secret U.S
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Updated 20d ago
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East Slavs
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Updated 24d ago
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slay so hard I need to lift
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Updated 28d ago
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