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Sequential

Snowfall is always exciting. During the snowfall, people love to stay outside the house and
have fun with the snow.
Building a snowman and playing snowballs are some fun activities to do during snowfall.
Snow is actually water droplets that fall from our clouds. The droplets of water become solid.
This process happens because the rainwater consists of particles of water vapor.
The particles are then being cooled in the air. When the water vapor that piles up in the
atmosphere of earth freezes, it becomes snow.
Snow will only be created when the cloud’s temperature becomes too frigid.
Snowflakes are made by the ice crystals that have established around the air’s little filth. Then
they will grow from smaller forms into the bigger ones. The snowflakes’ form is varied.
Casual
Covid-19 is the latest virus that has attacked the whole world. It becomes a pandemic and
contaminates people all around the globe. What is this Covid-19?
Covid-19 is a disease that is very infectious. The disease is caused by the new coronavirus
type. Is this virus dangerous? You need to learn how it spreads to humans to anticipate the
virus.
This virus can spread from person to person. It can easily spread between people who are in
contact about 6 feet away. The virus can also range through the respiratory dewdrops.
The dewdrops are produced by the infected persons who cough or sneeze. If the drops land in
the mouths or noses of people nearby, those people can get infected too.
Another way Covid-19 can spread to the other humans is by interaction with any infected
surfaces or objects.
When someone touches infected objects and touches their mouth or nose, they can be
infected.
This new virus is highly spreadable. We all need to be alerted and always follow the health
protocol in order to keep us free from the virus.
Theoretical
We see planes flying in the sky almost every day. Inside the planes, there are hundreds of
humans sitting and even walking safely. What makes the planes fly freely between the clouds?
Airplanes are able to generate energy. That’s why this huge and heavy object can fly in the air,
it is all because of the force that is scientifically named Lift. It will move the airplanes upward.
There are various forces that can make airplanes fly in the sky. Some of those forces are Lift,
Drag, Thrust, and Weight. How do the forces work and move the airplane?
In order to move the airplane forward, the engines are going to create Thrust that is greater
than the Drag. Drag itself is a force that is created by the airplane’s air resistance.
And in order to move the plane upward, forward motion should reach the right amount.
Airplane will be able to fly if only the Lift force is greater than the force in Weight. That’s how
the airplane can fly.
Factorial
The causes of World War II, a global war from 1939 to 1945 that was the deadliest conflict in
human history, have been given considerable attention by historians from many countries
who studied and understood them. The immediate precipitating event was the invasion of
Poland by Nazi Germany on September 1, 1939, and the subsequent declarations of war on
Germany made by Britain and France, but many other prior events have been suggested as
ultimate causes. Primary themes in historical analysis of the war's origins include the political
takeover of Germany in 1933 by Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party; Japanese militarism against
China, which led to theSecond Sino-Japanese War; Italian aggression against Ethiopia, which
led to the Second Italo-Ethiopian War and Germany's initial success in negotiating the
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact with the Soviet Union to divide the territorial control of Eastern
Europe between them.
During the interwar period, deep anger arose in the Weimar Republic on the conditions of the
1919 Treaty of Versailles, which punished Germany for its role in World War I with severe
conditions and heavy financial reparations to prevent it from ever becoming a military power
again. That provoked strong currents of revanchism in German politics, with complaints
primarily focused on the demilitarisation of the Rhineland, the prohibition of German
unification with Austria and the loss of some German-speaking territories and overseas
colonies.
During the worldwide economic crisis of the Great Depression in the 1930s, many people lost
faith in democracy and countries across the world turned to authoritarian regimes.[1] In
Germany, resentment and hatred of other countries was intensified by the instability of the
German political system, as many activists rejected the Weimar Republic's legitimacy. The
most extreme political aspirant to emerge from that situation was Adolf Hitler, the leader of
the Nazi Party. The Nazis took totalitarian power in Germany from 1933 and demanded the
undoing of the Versailles provisions. Their ambitious and aggressive domestic and foreign
policies reflected their ideologies of Antisemitism, unification of all Germans, the acquisition
of "living space" (Lebensraum) for agrarian settlers, the elimination of Bolshevism and the
hegemony of an "Aryan"/"Nordic" master race over "subhumans" (Untermenschen) such as
Jews and Slavs. Other factors leading to the war included the aggression by Fascist Italy
against Ethiopia and by Imperial Japan against China.
At first, the aggressive moves met with only feeble and ineffectual policies of appeasement
from the other major world powers. The League of Nations proved helpless, especially
regarding China and Ethiopia. A decisive proximate event was the 1938 Munich Conference,
which formally approved Germany's annexation of the Sudetenland from Czechoslovakia.
Hitler promised it was his last territorial claim, but in early 1939, he became even more
aggressive, and European governments finally realised that appeasement would not
guarantee peace.
Britain and France rejected diplomatic efforts to form a military alliance with the Soviet Union,
and Hitler instead offered Stalin a better deal in the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact of August 1939.
An alliance formed by Germany, Japan and Italy led to the establishment of the Axis powers.

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