Answer:
ethos , pathos , logos
Explanation:
An example of ethos in his speech says, "...number of those who, having eyes, see not, and having ears, hear not..."
An example of pathos from his speech is, "...it is natural to man to indulge in the illusions of hope."
An example of logos from Patrick Henry's speech is, "But when shall we be stronger? Will it be the next week, or the next year?"
18. What is no-man's-land?
Harry up!! Pls
When you recite the pledge of Allegiance, you are promising to uphold American ideals and values- liberty, justice and equal rights for all. Explain how these ideals and values are reflected in your everyday life.
Answer:
This question is a question that needs to be answered by yourself
Explanation:
Your everyday life is different from other people's, it is asking how these ideals reflect in YOUR everyday life.
who was the founder of delawaer
“Could the nation have avoided fighting the Civil War?”
Directions: answer the prompt using the axes paragraph format below. Be sure to skip A space between each segment. Your examples must be an item/event
Assertion:
Example/explanation #1:
Example/explanation #2:
Summary or conclusion:
SOMEONE PLEASE HELP!!!!
ayo could u give the artical?
Imagine that you are a legislator voting on the ratification of the Constitution. Will you vote against it? Why?
Answer:
Yes
Explanation:
because i hate construntction
Besides military force, how did Napoleon control so much territory in Europe?
Answer:
Following Napoleon giving up political power on France in 1799, He was crowned by himself the emperor in 1804. With Napoleon being a skilled strategist in the military, he succeeded in waging war against multiple unions of European countries and made his empire bigger.
Hope this helps out! :D
The most famous Spanish painter during the Age of Absolutism was ____________. *
El Greco
Don Quixote
Shakespeare
Answer:
El Greco
Explanation:
Don Quixote is the character of a book.
Shakespeare is English writer
Why was the population of Saint-Domingue so unbalanced?
it because of the slaves i dont know much but i do know it cause the slaves
Answer:
Haitian Revolution
Explanation:
What region was included in the Louisiana Purchase?
A.British territory
B.Oregon territory
C.land with waters that drained into the Mississippi River
D.land that touched the Pacific Ocean
Answer:
Land with waters that drained into the Mississippi River.
Please help asap! I will give a person the brainliest crown! Inappropriate comment will get report.
Do you think the government have the right to limit its its citizens during the war? If yes, then under what circumstances? This is Canadian History
Answer:
Yes they can If the government has a compelling interest it is seeking to protect, and the fundamental right the government seeks to restrict is fairly and narrowly regulated by the law in question, the restrictive law may be upheld by the courts.
Explanation:
Answer:
Yes, but only to a certain extent.
The government must be able to balance individual rights with the rights of the national interest. This may entirely depend on the level of security that the government would need. For example, other than fire balloons that were sent into the mainland of the US from Japan, there was little to no need for security for foreign invasions to the United States during World War II. This makes it so that in the probable cause of Japanese-descent residents to join the Axis Power is bar none, with no secure way to communicate. However, that does not mean that they would not be able to communicate information as a whole, but that it is typically only a one-way street, in which the Japanese government cannot fully help any dissenters within the United States. National Security is the only justifiable reason to enact limits on rights, and even then, it is frowned upon. Any other limitations, such as lockdowns for diseases, for example, are not justifiable in limiting a person's rights to their life choices, their liberties, and even equality of opportunities for each person depending on their job preferences.
At the end of the day, the government is to serve the people, not the other way around. The days of Feudalism and the security of Royalty is already over, and governments who fail to provide security, prosperity, and equality would either be overthrown by the people, or else by foreign interests.
What happened to the Byzantine Empire?
Explanation:
The fall of Constantinople to the ottoman empire in 1453 ended the Byzantine Empire.
Question 2
Which best describes the court case Fletcher v. Peck?
The Supreme Court ruled that a monopoly could not control all business in New York waters.
The Supreme Court ruled that a monopoly could not control all business in New York waters. , ,
The Supreme Court ruled that the federal government could not interfere with private contracts.
The Supreme Court ruled that the federal government could not interfere with private contracts. , ,
The Supreme Court ruled that the state of Maryland could not place a tax on the national bank.
The Supreme Court ruled that the state of Maryland could not place a tax on the national bank. , ,
The Supreme Court ruled that Georgia officials must honor a bad contract with land speculators.
Answer:
The Supreme Court ruled that the federal government could not interfere with private contracts.
The Supreme Court ruled that the federal government could not interfere with private contracts.
Explanation:
Based on what you learned about the Constitutional Convention, why do you think there was resistance to the U.S. Constitution?
Answer:
People didn't like ti
Explanation:
Henry's parents watched the match. They cheered loud/loudly
Which of the following is a feature of a good burger
The law that we’re
passed to help workers
Answer: Federal laws
Explanation: Give me the brainiest
Help help help help help
what popular christmas song was actually written for thanksgiving?
Answer: Jingle Bells
It is an assumption. I hope this helps.
What led to the formation of many new churches, especially in the Southern backcountry?
A. The Bill of Rights
B. The Enlightenment
C. The Great Awakening
D. The Glorious Revolution
The 3/5 Compromise solved the problem of how slaves would be counted in the population towards representation in Congress.
True
False
The_______ movement was about eliminating alcohol from the nation.
a, temperance
b, suffrage
c,18th amendment
d,none of these
Answer:
A. Temperance
Explanation:
Suffrage was for voting and the 18th Amendment, while connected to alcohol, was not a movement.
who was selected to preside over the constitutional convention
Answer:George Washington
Explanation:
Jerusalem is NOT considered the holy land for which of the following religions? *
Islam
Christianity
Buddhism
Judaism
Answer:
Buddhism
Explanation:
The city of Jerusalem is sacred to many religious traditions, including the Abrahamic religions of Islam, Christianity, and Judaism which consider it a holy city.
could use some help. giving brainly.
Answer:
Arts . d.
Explanation:
The Renaissance was a period of "rebirth" in arts, science and European society. It was a time of transition from the ancient world to the modern.
Although there were many underlying causes of World War I, one event is usually credited as the immediate cause that precipitated the outbreak of the war in August 1914. What was this event?
a. an intercepted Austrian telegram concerning war preparations
b. the sinking of a British passenger ship by a German submarine
c. the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand
d. the bombing of a historic church in the city of Sarajevo in Bosnia
Answer:
C
Explanation:
In the History books the assassination of the Archduke made the country declare war on the country the assasin came from.
Answer:
see image
Explanation:
1. How did the Liverpool Manchester Railroad that opened for business in 1830 differ from previous railroads?
from previous railroads?
A. It brought coal from the Yorkshire mines to a steel factory.
B.It transported paying citizens in passenger cars between cities.
C.It linked southern England with the northern half of the country.
D. It transported agricultural products from the countryside to major cities.
3. Which of the following are the results from the development of British railroad? Choose the three correct answers.
A. Created thousands of mining jobs
B. Improved living conditions for the poor
C. Lowered the cost of transporting good
D. encouraged people to travel for leisure
E. increased the size of the rural population
F. allowed for soldiers to travel to battlefields faster
Answer:
4. How did the Industrial Revolution change the lives of middle-class British women?
A. They began to receive the same wages as men.
B. They entered the workforce as domestic servants.
C. They began to attend college to train for careers as teachers.
D. They became isolated from their families working long hours in factories.
Answer:
5. Which group remained in the lower class of British society despite the wealth generated from the Industrial Revolution?
A. shop owners
B. textile workers
C. factory managers
D. mechanical drafters
Answer:
6. Which aspect of mass production allows a broken machine to be fixed quickly using an identical item?
A. specialization
B. assembly line
C. division of labor
D. interchangeable parts
Answer:
Explanation:
A-C and F The railroad allowed the opportunity to get the products to the mine.
Timeline of triangle shirtwaist factory
Answer:
July 13, 1900 Plans for a new building for Joseph Asch at Greene Street and Washington Place in New York City are approved.
January 15, 1901 Construction of the Asch building is completed.
1906 The Triangle Shirtwaist Company opens a factory on the eighth floor of the Asch building.
June 1909 A fire prevention expert writes a letter to Triangle Shirtwaist management suggesting that they hold a meeting to discuss improved safety measures, but the letter is ignored.
September 1909 Local 25 of the ILGWU declares a strike against the Triangle Shirtwaist Company. By November, the strike spreads to other shirtwaist manufacturers. The strike ends after thirteen weeks that saw over 700 striking workers arrested.
October 15, 1910 The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory passes a routine fire inspection.
November 25, 1910 A factory fire in Newark kills 25 workers, setting off renewed calls for improved fire prevention efforts.
January 15, 1911 The last time an accumulation (over a ton's worth) of cutaways is picked up from the Triangle Shirtwaist factory by a dealer. (The heavy accumulation of cutaways will help fuel the fire two months later.)
March 16, 1911 A report on fire traps is published. The report argues that many New York City building lack "even the most indispensable precautions necessary."
March 25, 1911 (4:40) Shortly before quitting time of 4:45, a fire breaks out on the eighth floor of the Asch building, housing the Triangle Shirtwaist factory. The fire will claim 146 victims, mostly young women.
March 25, 1911 (4:46) NYFD Company 72 arrives at the Asch building. The fire is spreading towards the ninth and tenth floors, also the workplace for Triangle Shirtwaist Company employees. Employees on the eighth floor head down, those on the tenth head to the roof, many on the ninth floor have nowhere to go.
March 25, 1911 (4:57) The last of dozens of bodies falls to the sidewalk from the ninth floor ledge.
March 25, 1911 (5:05) The fire is effectively brought under control.
March 25, 1911 (5:15) The fire is described as practically "all over."
March 25, 1911 (6:20) Fire fighters make their way to the badly burned top three floors of the Asch building, finding dozens of badly burned bodies as they do so.
March 25, 1911 (6:45) Throngs of grieving people push through police lines and move toward the Asch building.
March 25, 1911 (8:00) By now, 60 bodies have been lowered from the upper floors. The Death wagon returns to the Asch building for its second load.
March 25, 1911 (8:15) A Triangle Shirtwaist worker stuck in water in the bottom of an elevator shaft is rescued by fire fighters.
March 25, 1911 (9:05) A row of lights strung around the outside of the Asch building is turned on.
March 25, 1911 (11:15) The last body is taken down from the upper floors.
March 26, 1911 More than 100,000 grieving relatives and curious members of the public stream through a temporary morgue on the Twenty-sixth street pier, identifying loved ones or just looking.
April 2, 1911 A meeting is held to discuss concerns over lack of safe working conditions in New York City's factories. Resolutions are passed demanding new legislation.
April 5, 1911 A funeral parade is held for the seven bodies of fire victims that remain unidentified.
April 11, 1911 Isaac Harris and Max Blanck, co-owners of the Triangle Shirtwaist Company, are indicted for manslaughter in connection with the fire deaths. Reports indicate that the escape route from the ninth floor was blocked by a locked door.
June 30, 1911 New York creates a Factory Investigating Commission to examine the need for new legislation to prevent future fire disasters. The Commission will inspect 1,836 establishments and interview 222 witnesses before issuing its report. In part because of the work of the Commission, "the golden era in remedial factory legislation" is launched. Over the next three years, New York will enact 36 new safety laws.
December 4, 1911 Jury selection begins in the manslaughter trial of Harris and Blanck.
December 5, 1911 An angry crowd of women shout "Murderers! Murderers!" at the two defendants as they exit an elevator in the courtroom.
December 27, 1911 The jury retires to deliberate. After just less than two hours of discussion, the jury returns a verdict of not guilty.
March 21, 1912 The District Attorney moves for a second trial of Harris and Blanck, based on manslaughter indictments involving different victims than those in the first tria. The case will be dismissed, however, on Double Jeopardy grounds.
March 11, 1914 Twenty-three individual suits for damages against Triangle are settled for an average of just $75 per life lost.
February 22, 2001 Rose Freedman, the last survivor of the Triangle Fire, dies at age 107. She had been a lifelong crusader for worker safety.
(not my answer)
which olympic athlete famously competed in 1996 with an injured ankle?
Answer:
Kerri Strug
Explanation:
You are swinging a ball (weighing 188673 mg) around on a rope. The rope is 556 centimeters long. It takes 4.33 seconds for the ball to make one complete rotation. What is the force felt by the ball?
Explanation:
We can think of tension in a given rope as T = (m × g) + (m × a), where "g" is the acceleration due to the gravity of any objects the rope is supporting and "a" is any other acceleration on any objects the rope is supporting.
5. What does Abraham Lincoln think about a state’s right to secede? Explain.
Answer:
The secessionists claimed that according to the Constitution every state had the right to leave the Union. Lincoln claimed that they did not have that right. He opposed secession for these reasons: ... A government that allows secession will disintegrate into anarchy.
Explanation:
Answer:
according to the Constitution every state had the right to leave the Union. uh this answer might not help...