1. The cotton gin - It impacted society in terms of the reduction of labor that removed seeds.
2. Photography - It allows people to accurately familiarize themselves with far-off landscapes and cultures. Enabled the diffusion of objective information through the visual capture of things as they really are.
3. Electricity - Electricity helped to usher in industrial productivity on scales never before seen. Industries have been created to generate electricity for public use or transmit data through electrical signals .
4. The telephone - Quickness in communication, business, easier communication in wars
5. The locomotive - goods were transported overland easier reduction of labor.
Answer:False
Explanation:
In the POSTCONVENTIONAL stage a person has established their own moral and ethical standards, in a way that they get to understand that sometimes even the law can be challenged because some rules are not made for the good of the people and they need to be changed.
At this stage a person stands strong for their moral and ethical standards in a way that even if they have to go to jail they will gladly do so.
A person who believes in a right to life will fight for that right even if it is against the authority but they will not bow down even if they are threatened with a jail sentence.
Due to a misprinted paper he applied to the wrong job.
Answer: For Travelling womans, when they leave their hotel room they may put their important belongings behind the TV, put them in a box (Example: Tampon Box) For violence, when a woman and a child are stuck in house go to the kitchen cause there are more weapons in there than anywhere else.
sorry if it ans your
question thats all i got
the narrator is Paul Laurence Dunbar.
Paul Laurence Dunbar is one of the most widely known- and probably one of the best- poets to write in dialect. My favorite poem of his is without qualification The Poet and His Song (a poem written in Standard English), yet every time I read one of his dialect poems (or any such poem for that matter) I’m always moved in a way that doesn’t happen with Standard English reads. Both have their beauty, but poems in dialect seem to me to impart an apperception of culture that poems in grammatically correct English cannot. It is in this sense that I feel poems in dialect are prettier and more interesting. (Don't get me wrong, almost all of my favorite poems are in 'correct' syntax.)
I think you can get two sentences you like from there
hope this helps