Answer:
The option that best characterizes the contradiction that the author refers to is:
E. While traveling alone in the nineteenth-century was considered a radical act for a woman, the nineteenth-century solitary female travelers generally held conventional views.
Explanation:
<em>[...] solitary travelers espoused traditional values, eschewing radicalism and women’s movements. [...] the female travelers seemed content to leave society as it was while accomplishing their own liberation. In other words, they lived a contradiction.</em>
The lines above have what we need to answer this question. <u>The contradiction referred to in the passage concerns the female travelers of the 19th century. Even though those women were doing something considered astonishing back then - women were not supposed to travel on their own -, they were not breaking boundaries and taboos as they could have been. They were conventional in their general views, not worrying about society remaining the way it was. As long as they were free to do what they wanted, they did not feel the need to fight so that other women could do what they wanted as well. Thus, being revolutionary and, at the same time, conventional was their contradiction.</u>
Answer: A. They declared war and launched a series of attacks.
Explanation: Good luck! :D
Answer: Integrity is to be a gracious, kind, honest and respectful person. People with integrity are often highly thought of and have the respect of others.
Answer:
C
Explanation:
He called politocal parties "a fatal disease"
<u>BRAINLY PLEASE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!</u>
Answer: The people of Georgia are stereotyped both by their manners and for being highly religious. Language in Georgia is a combination of several different sub-dialects of Southern American English found in different areas of the state. The state's culture is also influenced by its economy, most notably from forestry and its many benefits to the state and its people. Finally, Georgia's cuisine is integral to its culture with such foods as seafood, cornbread, peaches and grits being part of the people of Georgia's diet and economy.
Georgia's culture originated with its settlement by British colonists after the founding of the colony by James Edward Oglethorpe in 1732. The early colonists were mostly English though there were also significant amounts of Scots-Irish, Salzburgers, Italians, Sephardic Jews, Moravians and Swiss, among others.[1] It is the amalgamation of these disparate ethnicities, along with the influx of African slaves and their descendants, which has created the modern culture of the state and the modern Georgian.