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irakobra [83]
3 years ago
8

1. How did the U.S. help Europe and keep its isolation policy?

Social Studies
1 answer:
MaRussiya [10]3 years ago
7 0
During the 1930s, the combination of the Great Depression and the memory of tragic losses in World War I contributed to pushing American public opinion and policy toward isolationism. Isolationists advocated non-involvement in European and Asian conflicts and non-entanglement in international politics.
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The central point of Thomas Paine's Common Sense was that it A) suggested economic reforms for the colonies. B) suggested a plan
IRISSAK [1]

Answer:

D. Pointed out the absurdity of continued loyalty to King George III

Explanation:

Common Sense, written by Thomas Paine, is considered the most influential pamphlet that helped gave birth to the American Revolution. In this pamphlet, Thomas Paine pointed out the absurdity of continued loyalty to King George III, by exposing the reasons why monarchies made no sense. He stated that since under God's eyes, all men are created equal, there was no reason and it was absurd that people were entitled with the right to rule simply by birth and not by preparation and abilities. He also exposed that Britain's interests had nothing to do with the American colonies, and that American colonies were being used to fight Britain's enemies, Paine exposed that a separation was needed in order to survive.

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Write about a problem faced by a child in a wheelchair​
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A child in a wheelchair is incapable of doing many things, including walking or running.

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2 years ago
How many people did moses lead out of egypt?
Elza [17]
The figure of 600,000<span> adult males described in Exodus 12:37, or 603,550 at Exodus 38:26, would imply a total population of Israelites in flight through the desert for 40 years of 2 to 2.5 million people, when the total population of Egypt at the time was 3 to 4.5 million.</span>
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3 years ago
What did the Korean War demonstrate about the US containment policy?
Talja [164]

Answer:

The Korean War was the first militarized instance of containment, as U.S. and South Korea fought against communist North Korea.

Key Points

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The Korean War was the first time the policy of containment spread outside the initial Asian defense perimeter as defined by the U.S. Secretary of State.

The success of the Inchon landing inspired the U.S. and the United Nations to adopt a rollback strategy to overthrow the Communist North Korean regime, which was later revoked after the Chinese Army intervened.

The cease-fire armistice that resulted from the Korean conflict divided Korea into a Communist northern state and a republican southern state, with a demilitarized zone between the two territories that remains to this day.

Currently, American troops are still stationed in South Korea.

Explanation:

I really hope this helps!!❤️

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3 years ago
List of six popular folk musical instruments of Nepalese society and give introduction of anyone​
lianna [129]

1) Bowed Strings

The four principle orchestral string instruments are (in descending order of overall pitch) the violins (usually divided into two sections, playing individual parts), the violas, the cellos and the double basses. Each have four strings arranged in order of pitch, can be played by means of a bow (arco) or plucked (pizzicato), but whereas the violin and viola are played with the instrument resting between the shoulder and the chin, the larger cello (or, to give it its full title, violoncello) is placed facing outwards between and slightly behind the knees, and the bulky double bass is played standing up or seated on a high stool.  Enthusiasts of Medieval, Renaissance and early Baroque music will encounter earlier varieties of bowed instruments known variously as vielle, viol, or in its earliest form, fidel (hence the modern nickname for a violin, 'fiddle'). The most popular member of the viol family is the cello's precursor, the viola da gamba (literally 'viol of the legs').

2) Woodwind

The four principle woodwind instruments of the orchestra all work by means of a system of keys (usually silver-plated) which when variously depressed and released allow air to pass through differing lengths of the instrument resulting in notes of different pitch. In order of descending overall pitch, these are:

Flute

a normally silver-plated (or in more extravagant cases, gold), narrow-bored instrument, held horizontally just under the mouth, and activated by blowing air across an aperture at one end of the instrument. Its higher-pitched cousin, the piccolo, is often encountered, although the lower alto flute rather less so. Early forebears include the unkeyed fife. The most popular close relation is the recorder family, largely unkeyed and end-blown in the vertical position.

OboeOboe

a narrow-bored wooden instrument descended from the medieval shawm, held vertically, and activated by means of placing the end-positioned double-reed in the mouth, and blowing under high-pressure so as to force air between the two bound reeds, causing them to vibrate. Other members of the oboe family include the lower pitched cor anglais (or English Horn), and (far more rarely) baritone oboe and heckelphone (bass oboe). The instrument's most famous predecessor is the Baroque oboe d'amore, often used by Johann Sebastian Bach.

Clarinet

like the oboe usually wooden, played vertically and held in the mouth, but with a wider bore and consisting of a single reed which when activated vibrates against a detachable mouthpiece. The standard instrument can be pitched in B flat (usually) or A, and the family is unusually extensive including the higher-pitched E flat, the B flat bass, the rarely-used C, the alto (a modern relative of the basset horn), and the even more obscure double-bass or 'pedal' clarinet. Occasionally the clarinet's 'popular' cousin can be seen in the concert hall, the saxophone.

BassoonBassoon

as the name would suggest, the bass member of the woodwind family, and by far the largest, especially its lower-pitched relation, the extremely bulky double or contra-bassoon. Like the oboe, it is a double-reed instrument, although to facilitate the playing action (the instrument is normally held across and in front of the body) it is connected to the bassoon via a silver-plated, curved crook. Its most notorious cousin is the Baroque serpent, shaped very much as its name would suggest.

3) Brass Instruments

Brass instruments are also activated by blowing into them, although instead of using a form of reed over which the mouth is placed, the lips are placed against or inside the cup of a metal mouthpiece, and made to vibrate against its inner rim. In order of descending pitch, these are:

Trumpet

one of the most ancient of all instruments. Played horizontally via a series of valves on the top of the instrument which are opened and closed in various combinations to create different pitches. Occasionally, the piccolo (higher) or bass (lower) trumpets are heard (and the trumpet's 'popular' cousin, the cornet), although more common nowadays in 'authentic' Baroque orchestras (which use instruments of the correct period or copies thereof), is the 'natural' or valveless trumpet. The more notationally limited bugle is rarely heard away from its traditional military context.

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