Josh. Rambler. Soleather. Sergeant Fathom. Thomas Jefferson Snodgrass. W. Epaminondas Adrastus Blab. A Son of Adam. I ran through the names in my head as I devoured dry-rub barbecue and piled up napkins at <span>Memphis’ bustling Rendezvous. The restaurant’s slogan—“Not since Adam has a rib been this famous”—had reminded me of Mark Twain’s fondness for comic allusions to Adam, to the extent that he based an early pen name on him. But “A Son of Adam,” along with “Josh” and “Rambler” and his other experiments, belonged to an amateur, a man who occasionally wrote while otherwise employed as a printer, steamboat pilot and miner. Not until he became a full-time journalist, far from the river, in the alkali dust of the Nevada Territory, did he settle on “Mark Twain.”</span>
Answer:
The reason was that the tensions, and the subsequent victory of the Union Side in the Civil War allowed the government of Abraham Lincoln to end slavery in the United States.
In other words, he had enough political capital because he had the backing of both union politicians and the people due to the need of leading the war against the Confederate Side in the Civil War.
Budget deficit. when the government spends more money than it collects in taxes. deficit financing. government policy of spending more money than it is able to bring in through revenues. budget surplus.
Answer:
France, Britain and Spain, but I'm sure there were others too
FALSE.
Portugal only had one major colony in the New World, and that was Brazil in South America.
Spain had colonies in North America, but they focused more on the rest of South America excluding Brazil more. The colonies they had in North America were quickly lost to Mexico and America.