PAGE 1
1 Road
2 Rode
3 Rowed
4 Sew
5 Sow
6 So
7 Scent
8 Sent
9 Cent
10 There
11 Their
12 They’re
13 Aisle
14 Isle
15 I’ll
PAGE 2
1 Right
2 Petal
3 Peddle
4 fore
5 Pare
6 Reign
7 Rite
8 Pear
9 Pair
10 Rein
11 Pedal
12 Write
13 Rain
14 Four
15 For
rip this took a while and then i realized there was the cheat sheet on the last page
<span>The Legislative Branch to make the laws. Congress is made up of two houses, the Senate and the House of Representatives. The Executive Branch to enforce the laws.</span>
Answer:
yes
Explanation:
fasting was something that jesus himself did for 30 days or more
fasting is giving your body for somthing else
Answer:
Correct answer is 3-a branch of government becomes too strong
.
Explanation:
Influenced by Montesquieu's ideas the framers of Constitution wanted to create political bodies that will divide power between themselves.
Therefore option 1 is correct.
Option 1 is not correct as military had no connection with this part.
Option 2 was resolved within division of state power in Senate and Congress.
Option 4 also is not correct as in democracy people have the right to change governments.
Answer:
The Pilgrims established a government of sorts under the Mayflower Compact of 1620, which enshrined the notion of the consent of the governed. Next, in 1630, the Puritans used the royal charter establishing the Massachusetts Bay Company to create a government in which “freemen”—white males who owned property and paid taxes and thus could take on the responsibility of governing—elected a governor and a single legislative body called the Great and General Court, made up of assistants and deputies.
Explanation:
Conflicts arose over the arbitrariness of the assistants, and in 1641 the legislature created the Body of Liberties. This document was a statement of principles for governance that protected individual liberties and was the basis for the guarantees later expressed in the Bill of Rights of the U.S. Constitution. In 1644 this single body became an entity made up of two chambers: the House of Assistants (later the Senate) and the House of Deputies (later the House of Representatives). This set the precedent of bicameralism for most governmental legislatures in the United States, including the eventual federal legislature.