<u>Answer:</u>
<em>Agriculture and writing
</em>
<em></em>
<u>Explanation:</u>
While Mesopotamia's dirt was fruitful, the locale's semiarid atmosphere did not have a lot of precipitation, with under ten inches yearly. This, at first, made cultivating troublesome. Two significant waterways in the area the Tigris and Euphrates - gave a wellspring of water that empowered wide-scale cultivating.
In contrast to the more bound together civic establishments of Egypt or Greece, Mesopotamia was an accumulation of changing societies whose lone genuine bonds were their content, their divine beings, and their frame of mind toward women.
<span>The motto "Liberté, Equalité, Fraternité", was initially aimed at uniting and inspiring revolutionaries to fight for the three ideals of freedom, equality and brotherhood. The ideals were the foundation of the 'new France' that the revolutionaries sought. </span><span>The motto stated that without basic freedoms and rights, there was no reason to live.</span>
<span>The Sudetenland contained 3.5 million Germans who had been cut off from the rest of Germany after the creation of Czechoslovakia by the Treaty of Versailles. Hitler felt he had a legitimate claim upon the area because he saw it as German land. Also, Sudeten Germans claimed they were victimized by the Czech government and wanted home rule or union with Germany. Britain was reluctant to involve herself because she had inadequate armed forces to do so and had no treaty obligations to Czechoslovakia. After the Bad Godesberg and Munich conferences the four main European powers (Britain, France, Italy and Germany) decided, without the presence of the Czech leader, to give the Sudetenland to Hitler over a ten day period. The Czechs had little alternative but to agree to Hitler's demands, as they had few allies and a weak army. (However they did have an alliance with France which they failed to honor) By the 1st of October 1938 the Sudetenland had been fully surrendered to Hitler.</span>
A is the right answer. Ya