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1.

The kitchen and the bathroom are the 2 most high traffic areas in a home, and kitchen
sinks are the dirtiest.
Food particles that sit along with germ transfer while cooking create a breeding ground for bacteria.
Disinfect your kitchen sink at least once a day and don’t miss the faucet! Bathroom toilets should be
cleaned every day using a product along with a toilet brush.

2. Spray and let sit


Stuck on grime and food wipes/scrubs off a lot easier if you spray and let soak. This ensures the cleaner
has a chance to do it’s job. My stove top, oven, tub/shower door, counters and toilets are the main
things I spray my product on and let soak. I like to let the product soak for at least five minutes(dirt and
grime are easier to wipe off) but you can let it sit for at the least a minute and be just fine.

3. Cleaning vs Disinfecting: The difference


Cleaning and disinfecting are two entirely different things. Cleaning is the action of removing dirt, while
disinfecting is defined as destroying or preventing the growth of disease-carrying microorganisms.
Remember that disinfecting everything too much can actually lower your defenses against germs and
viruses.

4. Shower door build up-There is a natural way to remove it!


Buildup on shower doors: Wipe with lemon oil. Removes buildup and keeps doors protected longer from
future buildup.

5. Almost half of cohabiting couples argue about cleaning.

Music is a form of art; an expression of emotions through harmonic frequencies. Music


is also a form of entertainment that puts sounds together in a way that people like,
find interesting or dance to. Most music includes people singing with their voices or
playing musical instruments, such as the piano, guitar, drums or violin.
The word music comes from the Greek word (mousike), which means "(art) of the
Muses". In Ancient Greece the Muses included the goddesses of music, poetry, art,
and dance. Someone who makes music is known as a musician.

ELEMENT Basic Related Terms


Rhythm: (beat, meter, tempo, syncopation)
Dynamics: (forte, piano, [etc.], crescendo, decrescendo)
Melody: (pitch, theme, conjunct, disjunct)
Harmony: (chord, progression, consonance, dissonance, key, tonality, atonality)
Tone color: (register, range, instrumentation)
Texture: (monophonic, homophonic, polyphonic, imitation, counterpoint)
Form: (binary, ternary, strophic, through-composed)

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