<p>The Arts and Crafts movement at the turn of the twentieth (century was a revolt against the uniformity of objects mass-produced) by the factories of the Industrial Revolution.</p>
<p>Answer is as is… i chose it but i thought it coulda been B?century revolted against objects that were mass-produced and uniform… WHY A?</p>
<p>ALso for the idiom " put questions to" someone… how do you use it?</p>
<p>The movement was against the uniformity of industrial objects, not industrial objects themselves. In other words the movement was against how industrial, mass-produced objects were. The people of the movement preferred objects that are crafted artistically rather than by machine. So they were against the lack of diversity, art, variation, etc., in industrially-made objects.</p>
<p>As for your last question, “put questions to” isn’t an idiom. It’s just a phrase where “put” has a particular definition. In this case, “put” means “to propose or submit for answer, consideration, deliberation, etc.” (Source: entry #15, [Put</a> | Define Put at Dictionary.com](<a href=“Put]Put Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com”>Put Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com)) So to put a question to someone is to propose a question to someone in hopes of an answer.</p>
<p>ahhh okay… there was a question where it was undiomatic because it was put questions towards.</p>
<p>The subject is movement</p>
<p>Arts and Crafts is just an adjective, don’t be tricked!</p>