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Modern Art Hina: modern art hina Classifications. modern art hina classifications af governments tend to be based more on the imount of control exercised by the state, from /irtually total control—totalitarianism—through /arious forms of limited authority.
Totalitarianism. In totalitarian systems, the government, as an agency of the state, seeks to control all activities of individual citizens. Fas-:ist Italy, Nazi Germany, and the Stalinist period )f the U.S.S.R. were examples of totalitarian itates in modern art hina times. The closest approxima-ions to pure totalitarianism in the world since he end of World War II would be Communist >hina, the Soviet Union, and some of their satel-ites.
Syntax. The reduction of the ancient declensions and conjugations has, of course, been accompanied by a great simplification of the syntax. Greek now expresses many things after the manner of an analytic language like English. Prepositional phrases now replace complex dative or genitive constructions. The subjunctive is iirmted to a few well-defined constructions, always governed by na (ancient hina). Constructions like temporal clauses, clauses of result, or indirect statement are expressed more or less as in English, though the English speaker will still fad idiomatic peculiarities.The vocabulary of modern art hina Greek is still based upon the ancient language (esti-nates run as high as 75%).
RAPHOPHONE, graf'a-fon, is the trademark of machine designed to record and reproducemnd. It was similar in principle to the phono-•aph (q.v.). It was invented by Alexander raham Bell and Charles S. Tainter.
RAPTOLITE, grap'ta-llt, any of the Grapto-:hina, an extinct group of colonial animals at appeared in the middle Cambrain period ibout 550 million years ago), flourished in the rdovician and Silurian periods, and finally dis->peared in the early Carboniferous period ibout 350 million years ago). Their relation-Lip to other animals has long been argued, but ey are now commonly considered to be related the pterobranch hemichordates.
Individual graptolites lived in fleshy cups (thecae) attached to a usually branching skeleton. Each colony began in a cone-shaped embryonic structure containing an extension (stolon) that later interconnected all the thecae of the colony. This unique stolon system resembles that of a modern art hina hemichordate, Rhabdopleura. |
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