Answer:
c) french settlements that comprised military garrisons, trading outposts, and missions
Explanation:
I hope this isn't a short answer question ^^
Your a colony in the new world, more than likely you have a few hundred people in your society shortly after arrival in the new world. first you would send your men to go chop down trees for the village because you need to used that wood for housing, fences/walls, and firewood to make food and keep warm in the winter months.
Eduction wasn't a huge concern and sometimes wasn't deemed necessary by the colony to teach, especially to the boys that would work along with the other men.
Hunting parties would be sent out for meat and farms would have to be grown and maintained during the spring and summer months. starvation and sickness where huge threats in the new world colonies, especially because they're weren't many doctors around at this time and all the diseases where new to the people who arrived there and most died from them.
Things like tea and grain would be bought from the British if available.
I really hope this helped, if you have any more questions about it just comment on this answer.
Answer:
B
Explanation:
The others explain the plot, not the literary analysis.
WWl
More than 350,000 African Americans served in segregated units during World War I, mostly as support troops. Several units saw action alongside French soldiers fighting against the Germans, and 171 African Americans were awarded the French Legion of Honor.
WWII
Despite a high enlistment rate in the U.S. Army, African Americans were not treated equally. At parades, church services, in transportation and canteens the races were kept separate. A quota of only 48 nurses was set for African-American women, and the women were segregated from white nurses and white soldiers for much of the war. Eventually more black nurses enlisted. They were assigned to care for black soldiers. Black nurses were integrated into everyday life with their white colleagues. The first African-American woman sworn into the Navy Nurse Corps was Phyllis Mae Dailey, a Columbia University student from New York. She was the first of only four African-American women to serve as a Navy nurse during World War II.
<u>Most women entered in the labor force for the first time during WWII.</u> In the US, for instance, many job positions were empty when the war started as, after the draft, many men were forced to join the armed forces and went to the battlefronts either the Europe, to the Pacific theatre of to the North African one.
As production levels had to be maintained for the well-functioning of the country, women occupied such empty positions and kept production processes working. This was the first contact with the labor force for many of them, and it <u>meant a turning point as, along the second half of the 20th century, female employment figures grew spetacularly.</u>