The correct answer here is the option D.
Tet offensive was a major offensive undertook by the Viet Cong along with the North Vietnamese People's Army of Vietnam and it showed the shocked South Vietnam and its American allies that the war was actually far from over. This also led to the loss of the support for the war in the States.
<span>While many believed that Native Americans were truly their greatest threat, in reality, it was the simple and mundane things like disease and accidents that did the most damage to the travelers. The fact that they traveled so closely together (and without the help of proper modern medicine) it was easier to get sick and without the ability to heal, eventually die from simple diseases such as the common cold. Other ways pioneers could be injured is by buggy turnovers on the steeper areas of hills and mountains which had more of a rocky flooring.</span>
2. untouchables
7. brahmins
9. skin color
10. hundreds
1. warriors
3. outlawed
4. castesystem
5. bell
6. sudras
8. aryans
The United States emerged from the war as a world military and industrial leader. Unlike the war-torn cities of Europe the homes and industries of the nation were relatively unscathed by the Great War. The late entry of the US meant that fewer men had lost their lives than in Europe
Answer:
I'd say the working class and immigrants
Explanation: