Buddhist monks made their way through silk road in first century CE and thereby Buddhism got spread across China and other parts of Asia.
Explanation:
After having its roots in China, Buddhism expanded to Central Asia, Korea and Japan. This form of Buddhism later got spread in East Asia which was known as Mahayana and then the same culture started to expand and flourish in Tibet and Nepal in the name of Vajrayana.
These countries adopted various traditions and cultures which significantly varied on the basis of Buddhist teachings and scriptures. Burma, Myanmar and SriLanka also absorbed the teachings of Buddhism and many Buddhist monks formed monasteries and began to spread the teachings of Buddha around the world.
Answer:
the cold war led to the beginning of several
The correct answer is Each sentence begins with the subject.
Explanation:
In this paragraph, all the sentences start with the word "Cory" who is the subject in the sentence as he is the one that performed actions such as try, attend, or made. This writing feature makes the text quite monotonous because all the sentences have the same structure (subject-predicate), and therefore there is no sentence variety. Moreover, this can be corrected if other types of sentences are used; for example, the author can begin a sentence with the object of the action, the verb, or a transition. According to this, the paragraph lacks sentence variety because each sentence begins with the subject.
Answer: Franklin D. Roosevelt
You didn't provide a list of choices, but Franklin Delano Roosevelt issued by far more executive orders than any other president. FDR signed 3,721 executive orders. (Five of them were overturned by the Supreme Court as unconstitutional.)
The next closest presidents in use of executive orders had only half as many as FDR. Woodrow Wilson issued 1,803; Calvin Coolidge issued 1,203; Teddy Roosevelt issued 1,081. If we think presidents recently have made heavy use of executive orders -- such as 277 executive orders by Barack Obama -- they are not even close to the high numbers issued by some presidents in the past.
According to reporting by CNN, President Donald Trump, who had criticized Obama's use of executive orders, is on pace to sign more executive orders than any president in the past 50 years. Trump is averaging over 4 executive orders per month. President Obama's number of executive orders for his eight years in office averaged less than 3 per month.