9. I believe is A. 10. I believe is C. And 11. I believe isD.
Explanation:
It’s often thought that the other sovereigns of Europe regarded the toppling of Louis XVI in 1791 and his execution two years later as an affront to established order, and a danger to their own safety. In fact this is inaccurate. To see why, you need to keep in mind that Europe for most of its history basically worked like New York in the Godfather trilogy—a bunch of rival families who made a big show of being civilized and honorable, but who were at the end of the day utterly bloodthirsty, calculating and ruthlessly pragmatic. Violence, even against a king, was not condemned in the least; or rather, it was on the surface, while beneath, everyone set about figuring out how it could be turned to his advantage. The French Revolution, from an external point of view, was seen mainly as a weakening of the French nation, and as a consequence it presented lots of potential opportunity.
Answer:
The Cuban missile crisis
Explanation:
The Cuban Missile Crisis also known as the Missile Scare or Caribbean Crisis, happened in October 1962. It was a 13 days dangerous confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union over the arrival of Soviet technicians with equipments to manufacture Soviet nuclear-armed missiles in Cuba.
President John F. Kennedy on the 22nd of October announced the a naval quarantine to stop the delivery of missiles and demanded the existing missile sites in Cuba be dismantled immediately.
The Cuban missile crisis exposed the Soviets’ military inferiority and led to the buildup of weapons in the United States and the Soviet Union.
Answer:
<h3>A) free recall.</h3><h3 />
Explanation:
Free recall is the mental process of retrieving information from the past. It is a type of recall in which a person may recall a list of information in any order. It does not require the individual to recall a list of information or a series of events accordingly. A individual may recall information randomly or in any pattern in a free recall.
For instance, in a free recall, an individual given a list of information about the events that occurred during the Cold War in a sequential order can recall the events randomly without following the sequential order when asked about it.
Similarly, writing down the names of all twentieth-century U.S. presidents from memory is an activity of free recall because the individual is not following any sequential order while writing the names of all twentieth-century U.S. presidents.