Answer:
What does Elizabeth think about freedom? because she doesn`t wanna be a slave anymore
Who was Harriet Tubman, and why was she Elizabeth’s hero? she helped them to get to freedom by using the underground railroad
Why did Elizabeth feel hope while she waited by the river? so she can have freedom
Explanation:
What was the main reason for the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882?
A) Preventing the depletion of natural resources
B) Discouraging anti-American activism
C) Reducing competition for U.S. jobs
D) Addressing a lack of urban housing
Which obstacle was faced by African Americans serving in the armed forces during World War II?
They were placed under French command.
They were forced to serve in segregated units.
None of them ever saw combat during the war.
O They were not subject to military conscription.
When future historians examine our contemporary age, they will likely be perplexed by many things. Of course, change is a constant throughout history. The past flows into the present, which in turn the future.
Fill in the blank with the correct answer.
A) destroys
B) controls
C) merges with
D) rallies around
Answer:
The correct answer is C
What government action first allowed American businessmen to come to China in large numbers?
Answer:
Signing of the Burlingame Treaty
Explanation:
The government action that first allowed American businessmen to come to China in large numbers is the "Signing of the Burlingame Treaty."
This was signed in 1868 in Washington, DC, and ratified in 1869. It specifies an agreeable connection between China and the United States.
The Burlingame Treaty ensures both China and the United States have the right to move freely to either country without restrictions.
Answer:
The Signing of the Burlingame Treaty - AP3X
Explanation:
The signing of the Burlingame treaty was what first allowed American businessmen to travel to China in large numbers.
Also, I just took the Apéx quiz and got the correct answer.
what do people use in.stagram more than other apps
Answer:
snap, twitter, fb
Explanation:
Answer:
It is good for uploading pictures and messaging others.
Along what river is Tulsa located?
A. Colorado
B. Texas
C. Arkansas
D. Red
Answer:
C
Explanation:
It is situated on the Arkansas River between the Osage Hills and the foothills of the Ozark Mountains in northeast Oklahoma, a region of the state known as "Green Country".
Which steps are beneficial when paraphrasing another’s work? Select three options.
A) asking for permission
B) checking for accuracy
C) using direct quotations
D) reading the excerpt twice
E)defining unfamiliar words
Answer:
a b and e
Explanation:
The organized boycotting of busses allowed for MLK to become the face of the Civil Rights Movement. In what city did this occur?
O Birmingham, AL
O Montgomery, AL
Jackson, MS
O Atlanta, GA
Answer:
Montgomery, AL
Explanation:
Otherwise known as the Montgomery Bus Boycott, this event was a political and social protest against the city's racial segregation policy on the public transit system that was enforced at the time.
How did the U.S. military hope to win the war in Vietnam?
Answer:
Yes
Explanation:
Anytime anyone is in a war, they hope to when it.
Answer:
Despite its ally's fundamental weakness, the United States might possibly still have won, of course, had it been willing to fully mobilize its own national power. ... As long as the war in Vietnam didn't demand too much of them and they believed that victory was just around the corner, most Americans would support it.
Explanation:
Who developed the atlatl as a new weapon
Answer:
The atlatl or spear thrower is a hunting technology which was invented at least 17,000 years ago by Upper Paleolithic humans in Europe. Atlatls give additional velocity and thrust compared to spear-throwing, and they allow the hunter to stand farther away from the prey.
Explanation:
Answer:
the atlatl weapon was made by some Upper Paleolithic humans in Europe
Explanation:
How is FDR different from Wilson in his response to the outbreak of WWll and what he says to Americans?
Answer:
Explanation:
Franklin Roosevelt gave a radio address to Americans on the same day, deploring the commencement of war while laying the blame on Nazi aggression. However, on November 4 of 1939, Congress renewed the “cash and carry” provision in a new Neutrality Act ending the arms embargo with nations fighting Nazi Germany.
which of the following is not considered a cause of the enlightenment? a) increased availability of printed books . b) the scientific revolution. c) decline in the education system . d) the renaissance
Answer:
Decline in the education system.
A decline in the education system would have hindered the enlightenment, as the enlightenment itself is an age of progress is science and philosophy.
Explanation:
Help and gn and thank u
Answer:
2. answer 4
Explanation:
3. between 20 and 30 so 25 (da)
What was the structure of Japanese feudal society?
Answer:
Like in medieval Europe, Japan developed a feudal system dominated by a warrior aristocracy outside of the weak central government. The emperor was the head of feudal society in name only. The shogun, the military commander, held the real power. The shogun gave lands to vassal lords, daimyo, who supported him.
Pls don’t report what’s 688292x92929292
Answer:
6.3962488e+13
Explanation:
Answer:
Explanation:mmmmmmm
The black codes were laws created for
what group of people to follow?
Somebody help me plzzzz
Answer:
African Americans.
Each Mayan city was called a:
providence
city-state
metropolis
town
pls be fast doing a test
Answer:
town
Explanation:
can you help me with my question According to the narrator in Paragraph 3 of "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County," Simon Wheeler's tone throughout his entire tale was A earnest and sincere, B. excited and pressing, C. sad and melancholy,
Answer:
city state
Explanation:
I think it is the correct answer
How would you break down the wooden door of the castle if you were attacking
Answer:
Mostly likely go at the door with a battering ram
Explanation:
Which phrase accurately describes the term industrial revolution?
List five problems that America faced with westward expansion.
Answer:
Be it climate, starvation, dehydration, illness or simply old age, many people would die along the trek west on the Oregon Trail. Considering these many factors there is an established grand total of around 200,000 American settlers who died trying to get to their new beginning.
Explanation:
Which statement best completes the diagram?
Cultural features
of China
The Han are the
largest ethnic
group
Mandarin and
Cantonese are major
languages
O A. There is little interest in foreign music or foods.
O B. Most people live in small farming villages.
O C. Arts can be limited by the government.
D. Christianity is the most popular religion.
Answer: The answer is C
Explanation:
I just took the test
stricts of Louisiana.
How are the areas shown on this map determined?
cts
O by parish borders
O by population statistics
O by number of cities and towns
O by state supreme court districts
Answer:It’s Not A or C I wish I could help more but that’s all I know :(
Answer:
A
Explanation:
Ernie Pyle's coverage of World War II was different from that of others
because he:
O A. focused on the daily lives of soldiers.
B. wrote while fighting in combat.
C. gave readers a complete picture of the war.
D. drew illustrations to support his stories.
Answer:
B. wrote while fighting in combat. hope this helps a lot!!
Explanation:
A similarity between Woodrow Wilson and Theodore Roosevelt was that both
Answer:
Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson · Progressive Social Policies In one of their most striking similarities
Explanation:
Describe how the Middle Colonies developed.
9. What is the name of the principal that the authority of the federal government is equally divided among three
branches to avoid tyranny?
2. Separation of Powers
b. Divided Liberties
c. Federalism
d. Checks and Balances
please help 10 points per person
Answer:
A.
Explanation:
Why do you think massachusetts became a leader in the american revolution?
Answer: because the first protests, riots and other acts of rebellion occurred there as did the first battles of the Revolutionary War.
Explanation:
Help me please!!
Topic: Prohibition
Who,what, when, where, and why about the topic 1-2 paragraphs please
(21 POINTS)
Answer:
Prohibition, legal prevention of the manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages in the United States from 1920 to 1933 under the terms of the Eighteenth Amendment. Although the temperance movement, which was widely supported, had succeeded in bringing about this legislation, millions of Americans were willing to drink liquor (distilled spirits) illegally, which gave rise to bootlegging (the illegal production and sale of liquor) and speakeasies (illegal, secretive drinking establishments), both of which were capitalized upon by organized crime. As a result, the Prohibition era also is remembered as a period of gangsterism, characterized by competition and violent turf battles between criminal gangs.
Prohibition
Prohibition
New York City Deputy Police Commissioner John A. Leach (right) watching agents pour liquor into the sewer following a raid, c. 1920.
New York World-Telegram and the Sun Newspaper Photograph Collection/Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. (neg. no. LC-USZ62-123257)
anti-Prohibition protest
anti-Prohibition protest
A protest against Prohibition in New York.
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
Prohibition
QUICK FACTS
DATE
1920 - 1933
LOCATION
United States
KEY PEOPLE
Texas Guinan
Eliot Ness
RELATED TOPICS
Alcoholic beverage
Eighteenth Amendment
Prohibition
DID YOU KNOW?
The 18th Amendment did not outlaw alcohol consumption.
Winemakers stayed in business by selling "wine bricks" that could be dissolved to make wine.
The Temperance Movement And The Eighteenth Amendment
In the United States an early wave of movements for state and local prohibition arose from the intensive religious revivalism of the 1820s and ’30s, which stimulated movements toward perfectionism in human beings, including temperance and abolitionism. Although an abstinence pledge had been introduced by churches as early as 1800, the earliest temperance organizations seem to have been those founded at Saratoga, New York, in 1808 and in Massachusetts in 1813. The movement spread rapidly under the influence of the churches; by 1833 there were 6,000 local societies in several U.S. states. The precedent for seeking temperance through law was set by a Massachusetts law, passed in 1838 and repealed two years later, which prohibited sales of spirits in less than 15-gallon (55-litre) quantities. The first state prohibition law was passed in Maine in 1846 and ushered in a wave of such state legislation before the American Civil War.
Prohibition Party
Prohibition Party
National Prohibition Convention, Cincinnati, Ohio, 1892.
Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. (digital file number cph 3b07410)
TOP QUESTIONS
What led to Prohibition?
How long did Prohibition last?
What were the effects of Prohibition?
How did people get around Prohibition?
How was Prohibition enforced?
Conceived by Wayne Wheeler, the leader of the Anti-Saloon League, the Eighteenth Amendment passed in both chambers of the U.S. Congress in December 1917 and was ratified by the requisite three-fourths of the states in January 1919. Its language called for Congress to pass enforcement legislation, and that was championed by Andrew Volstead, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, who engineered passage of the National Prohibition Act (better known as the Volstead Act) over the veto of Pres. Woodrow Wilson.
Bootlegging And Gangsterism
Neither the Volstead Act nor the Eighteenth Amendment was enforced with great success. Indeed, entire illegal economies (bootlegging, speakeasies, and distilling operations) flourished. The earliest bootleggers began smuggling foreign-made commercial liquor into the United States from across the Canadian and Mexican borders and along the seacoasts from ships under foreign registry. Their favourite sources of supply were the Bahamas, Cuba, and the French islands of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon, off the southern coast of Newfoundland. A favourite rendezvous of the rum-running ships was a point opposite Atlantic City, New Jersey, just outside the three-mile (five-km) limit beyond which the U.S. government lacked jurisdiction. The bootleggers anchored in that area and discharged their loads into high-powered craft that were built to outrace U.S. Coast Guard cutters.
Get a Britannica Premium subscription and gain access to exclusive content.
Subscribe Now
That type of smuggling became riskier and more expensive when the U.S. Coast Guard began halting and searching ships at greater distances from the coast and using fast motor launches of its own. Boot
PLEASE HELP!!!!!!!! ASAPP
Answer:
I think it's C Beautify the area