The answer would be letter B.
Answer:
Price and quantity supplied
Explanation:
The supply curve is a graphic representation of the relationship between the cost of a good and the quantity supplied of this good for a particular time period. Therefore, two factors that are displayed in the supply curve are the price and quantity supplied. The supply curve changes when these factors change too. Normally, as the price of a commodity increases, the quantity supplied increases too (all else being equal). However, changes in production can cause the curve to move left and right. Similarly, changes in price can cause the graph to shift as well.
A recession refers to the moment when there is a slow economic activity and people are not buying things and they are losing their jobs or they highly indebted. During this periods of time, the government usually tries to weather the recession by offering more job opportunities, decreasing taxes and spending more money in public funding. Thus, the right choice is option D. pass a law stating that Californians no longer have to pay federal income taxes.
Answer:
It is there history of there creativity of making the design of the Rock for Kings and other richer people so that their place can look better then any other
Explanation:
Indian rock-cut architecture has more examples than any other form of rock-cut architecture in the world.
[1] Rock-cut architecture defines the practice of creating a structure by carving it out of solid natural rock. The craftsman removes rock not part of the structure until the architectural elements of the excavated interior constitute the only rock left. Indian rock-cut architecture, for the most part, is religious in nature.
[2] In India, caves have long been regarded as places of sanctity. Enlarged or entirely man-made caves hold the same sanctity as natural caves. The sanctuary in all Indian religious structures, even free standing ones, retain the same cave-like feeling of sacredness, being small and dark without natural light.
Curiously, Buddhist monks created their cave hermitages near trade routes that crossed northern India during the time of Christ. As wealthy traders became aware of the Buddhist caves, they became benefactors of expansion of the caves, the building of monolithic rock-cut temples, and of free-standing temples. Emperors and rulers also supported the devotional work and participated in the spiritual devotional services. Very likely, traders would use the hermitages for worship on their routes. As Buddhism weakened in the face of a renewed Hinduism during the eighth century C.E., the rock structure maintenance, expansion, and upgrading fell to the Hindus and Jains. Hindu holy men continued building structures out of rock, dedicating temples to Hindu gods like Shiva, until mysteriously they abandoned the temples around the twelfth century C.E. They abandoned the structures so completely that even local peoples lost knowledge of the awesome structures in their midst. Only in the nineteenth century, when British adventurers and explorers found them, did India rediscover the awesome architecture that comprises world treasures.