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Project J: Collection of Collections
https://www.canva.com/design/DAENHHefMfw/share/preview?token=6QAjNPzcWHr8axI8wddVUw&role=EDITOR&utm_content=DAENHHefMfw&utm_campaign=designshare&utm_medium=link&utm_source=sharebutton.
The first wicked weed collections that I have included in the presentation accomplish the interrelationship that tends to exists between people living in the same home. In most cases, people living in the same house tend to have the same conversation tied to how things are achieved and undertaken. For instance, the collection offers distinct topics of conversation that were made throughout the evening. The conversation topic involved husbands, children, maids, and the daily life of the family. Each family member was raising a concern on how they have been affected by the other’s inefficiency (Eco, 218). For instance, Cuesta Hermosa states that she has, on many occasions, told her man to get her a bag but in vain. As a result, she is dying of embarrassment every time they go to a tournament because her man cannot buy a gold bag to enhance his appearance (Cabiya, 38). For that reason, the listing is essential because it helps readers understand what the family is going through based on each member’s concerns and issues. The conversation topic is also essential because the reader will understand how members of the family are affected.
There is a connection between listing in genetics and listing in literature because they all break down topics to enable readers to understand what the writer intended to pass to the audience. If a biochemist could strap himself to the gene-copying enzyme (DNA polymerase), straddling its back as it made a copy of DNA and keeping tabs as the enzyme added base upon base-A, C, T, G, C, C, C and so forth-the sequence of a gene would become known (Mukherjee, 218). The quote breaks down ways that listing was done in the Gene.
Works Cited
Cabiya, Pedro. Wicked Weeds: A Zombie Novel.
Eco, Umberto, Alastair McEwen, and Alastair McEwen. The infinity of lists. New York: Rizzoli, 2009.
Mukherjee, Siddhartha. Il gene. Edizioni Mondadori, 2016.