Types of Art
Swimming
”The strangest food I ever ate”
Flowers
Music Terms & Symbols
200

This form of art media is used mainly for film and animations, as well as for comic and cartoon creation

Digital art

200

A common swim stroke involving “pushing” backwards underwater to propel oneself forward

Breaststroke

200

This well-known, often large and hairy arachnid is served as a snack most commonly in Asia, starting from Cambodia.

Tarantula

200

Most widely recognized as a symbol of love, yellow varieties instead denote friendship

Roses

200

Term for notes in sheet music gradually becoming louder, often towards the end of a measure

Crescendo

400

In a proportional drawing of the human face, this feature would be drawn approximately 3/4 from the top of the head to the chin.

The nose

400

The most energy-conserving swim stroke, where swim stroke, where swimmers alternate arms, lifting past their neck to reach into the water and tilting their head to the side to breathe, while kicking to further move forward

Freestyle

400

A Greenland specialty known as Muktuk, this meal can be served either pickled or raw, and is not (regularly) consumed anywhere else in the world.

Whale blubber

400

This wildflower is called "Scorpion Grass", but is more generally known by another common name, and is seen sprinkling lawns with small patches of blue and yellow

Forget-me-nots

400

A flowing tempo in which music is played without pauses between notes, but not quickly

Andante

600

The main medium used by professional illustrators for the coloring of linework on paper

Watercolor paint

600

A leg technique named after an aquatic animal, this kicking-stroke mimics the animal’s own swimming

Dolphin kicks

600

In Japan, this aquatic animal's body part is considered a delicacy.

Tuna eyeballs

600

This bright flower, named for its golden hue and outstretched petals, is known as one of the tallest as well as widest-growing 

Sunflowers

600

A vertical separation drawn through a musical staff to mark the end of a measure and the start of the next

Bar line

800

Depending on your class, most teachers and professors teach that there are _-_ Principles of Art.

7-10

800

Swim stroke in which the swimmers alternate lifting “weaves” their body through the water, lifting both arms over their head to pull themselves forward while simultaneously using the “dolphin kick“ technique, coming up for air once per stroke

Butterfly
800

The term for a common food staple in the Philippines, referring to a partially developed duck egg that is boiled alive.

Balut

800

These pretty lavender-blue flowers are native to England and France, and tend to live in windy areas, such as in fields or beaches

Bluebells

800

Noting that a measure or piece be played slowly or extremely slowly

"Adiago"

1000

An easy way to “copy” a sketch done on paper onto a canvas is to trace over the sketch after covering the back of the paper with this drawing medium

Charcoal

1000

“Upside-down” freestyle, where swimmers face the ceiling and essentially move backwards through the lanes

Backstroke

1000

This brown, gelatinous canned good, while not common, is mainly seen in Canada, and is made from meat, fat, and cartilage 

Jellied/candied moose nose

1000

These flowers are often named in conversation after "chin up", what's up", or "suck it up"

Buttercups

1000

The symbol used to cancel out either the key signature's sharps or flats, or those marked in that particular measure (hint: it looks like this -> ♮ )

"Natural" ♮ 

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