Answer:
Ephesus is:
A) Located in Asia Minor
C) Famous temple dedicated to Diana
D) Site of one of Paul's churches
E) Recipient of one of Paul's letters
Explanation:
Ephesus is an ancient city in the Aegean region of central Turkey, near the modern Selçuk. Its excavated ruins reflect centuries of history, from classical Greece to the Roman Empire (when the city was the main trading center of the Mediterranean), until the spread of Christianity. <em><u>The areas descripted above are related to the Asia Minor territory.</u></em>
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<em><u>The Temple of Diana </u></em>was one of the seven wonders of the Ancient World. <u><em>Located in Ephesus</em></u>, it was the largest temple in the ancient world, and by far <u>the most significant made of Greek civilization and Hellenism, built for the Greek goddess Artemis, hunting and wildlife.</u>
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Ephesus is the location of one of<em><u> St. Paul's Churches</u></em>, and <u><em>where he wrote one of his letters</em></u>, also know as <u>Epistle to the Ephesians</u>
Answer:
assault
Explanation: it is a lesser crime even though you might have to go to jail for it, it could be dumping your hot coffee on someone's lap on purpose. it depends on the "assault" you performed. now comparing it to speeding, even though it is a lesser crime it could also be classified as a civil infraction. Under Michigan law, a traffic violation is classified as either a civil infraction or a misdemeanor. Sanctions are charge specific, but they can include fines and costs, license suspension and, in the case of misdemeanor traffic offenses, jail. so it is likely to be assault, not speeding.
Answer:
Kantian tradition
Explanation:
Kant believed supported animal right and hence animals should not be treated as just a mere object or a property. He believed that animals are like human beings, in the sense that they have the cognitive capacity for consciousness and presentations. He emphasized that when animals are abused there is a more likelihood for humans to also be abused. He therefore kicked against animal cruelty.
Answer: leave the public road and take a foot-path leading through the woods, across branches and swamps, until [reaching] a worn fence made of pine rails, inclosing a half cleared patch of land containing three or four acres, in the center of which generally stands the Indian cabin[s]…A little distanse from the cabin will be found in the yard a well of water, or rather a hole dug in the ground … A poor, half-starved fice dog, used for hunting "possums" and "wild varmints" will generally be found inside of the inclosure … Two or three acres cleared are ploughed and planted in corn, potatoes, and rice… The bed is made on the floor (generally a clay floor) … No division in the cabin … The above picture is true of a great majority of the Indians…
For a very long time [Lumbees] have enjoyed hog killings as events which brought neighbors together for a day of work and fun. Pork was such an important staple in the local diet that most of the corn grown prior to World War II was fed to hogs, and most of the hogs were then butchered for home consumption.
Until comparatively recently, farming was the principal occupation among the Lumbee. Adolph Dial and David Eliades describe farm life as follows in "The Only Land I Know": daily round of milking, feeding, gathering, and, depending on the time of the year, of planting, cultivating or harvesting…In earlier days a typical forty-acre farmer put about half his land in money crops, such as cotton and tobacco; fifteen acres of corn, two acres for garden vegetables and a potato patch, and three acres for hay.
Explanation: