There was new music, such as jazz and the blues. New churches and religious customs came north. There was different food and spoken dialect. Celebrations from their cultures came along with new neighborhoods. Finally, newspapers and journals had more of an impact.
it is basically people who don't live in a specific place(meaning they move around a lot) that hunt animals for food. if you are referring to people, cave dwellers are people who lived in caves
The first steps toward economic imperialism in China date from the mid-1500s, when Portuguese traders paid for access to ports in Macau on China's far south-east coast. In 1711, the British East India Company also established a trading post there.
<span>Assuming that this is referring to the same list of options that was posted before with this question, <span>the correct response would be that they both believed in the "social contract," since this was an Enlightenment principle that allowed people to overthrow their government if that government became tyrannical. </span></span>