Answer:
Britain
Explanation:
This process began in Britain in the 18th century and from there spread to other parts of the world. Although used earlier by French writers, the term Industrial Revolution was first popularized by the English economic historian Arnold Toynbee (1852–83) to describe Britain's economic development from 1760 to 1840.
<em>hope this helped! :)</em>
Answer:The main reason why president bush targeted Afghanistan after declaring war on terror was because this was supposedly the base of the terrorist organization that had planned and executed the attacks: Al-Qaeda.
The correct answer is implied powers.
Implied powers are the powers of the U.S. government which have not been explicitly granted by the Constitution. <em>There are only implied when there is a necessity to carry out the expressed powers.</em>
The so called 'Elastic Clause" that appears in Article I section 8 of the Constitution grants Congress the power to pass unspecified laws 'necessary and proper' for the exercise of its expressed powers.
The implied powers are not stated as such and their definition is unclear. They are difficult to interpret or understand as the phrase 'necessary and proper' can have a very broad interpretation. It can be very subjective ( what's proper for one can not be proper for another ) and so it has been extremely controversial and subject to ferocious political disagreements.
Answer:
However, the Northern Europe Renaissance was much more religious in its nature than the Italian Renaissance. ... The religious character of the Renaissance north of the Alps was due in part to the continuing influence of the Church, unlike in Italy, where the Church was in decline.
Explanation:
\n. \n Not necessarily \n. \nFanciful and preposterous lies aren't necessarily a symptom of chronic lying. Chronic, in the context of your question, implies a habitual or pathological behavior or trait. Lying to avoid getting caught for committing a more serious offense is neither chronic nor irrational. In fact, it is quite rational inasmuch as the "big lie" is often easier to believe than a small prevarication. After all, the reasoning goes, why would someone make up a patently incredible story? so, he MUST be telling the truth.\n. \nFar more likely is the liar isn't very good at lying, whether or not he (or she) is experienced at it.\n. \n Answer \n. \nYes, he definitely has a problem and is a pathological liar. The above poster made some fine points, but lying is lying. If it's repeated over and over again this person has a problem and should seek psychological counseling if they want to have a successful relationship. People can lie for various reasons. They may feel less of a person because they came from a bad or poor background and they want to appear equal with their peers. They may lie simply because they got away with it as a child and they were never reprimanded for it and therefore they don't know any better. Sometimes if the child told the truth they got a beating for it so it was easier to lie than tell the truth. Pathological liars don't mean to be this way and may not even know they are. It would take someone else to perhaps a few other people to tell this person to get some help. Once people have the label of being a liar they can't be trusted and when they do tell the truth no one will believe them. You've heard about Peter & the Wolf!