whome did the chief of builder blames
'The tale of melon city'
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Heat, a measure of thermal energy, can be transferred from one point to another. ... The specific heat of copper, Cu, is c = 0.386 J/g°C. Answer: The temperature change Δ T = 100 °C - 20 °C = 80 °C. The mass, m = 50 g. Use the formula for Heat Transfer.
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The poem takes a rather humorous turn when it comes to hanging the culprit for the low-built arch. Having struck his crown with the arch, the king at once ordered the chief of builders to be hanged. He upon reaching the scaffold put the blame on the workmen, to escape the punishment. Maintaining his calm, the king ordered for the workmen to be hanged instead, who further blamed the masons for making the bricks of wrong size. The masons were summoned but they fearfully passed on the blame to the architect who had made the plans for the arch. The architect then cleverly blames the king for having made the amendments to the plan, that led to it being built so low. The matter got settled when His Majesty got hanged himself because no one else could fit the noose. The whole dilemma of deciding the culprit brings out the irony of the situation that the king, who ordered a hanging because his crown got struck off, gets hanged himself in the end due to his own foolishness.
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