The correct answer is D; Various groups promoted new styles of dress.
Further Explanation:
The above question is in reference to the excerpt "Driven by a desire for comfort and physical well-being, several groups of women introduced alternative approaches to fashion in the 1850s. Most combined a dress shortened to about four or five inches below the knee with some sort of baggy pantaloons worn underneath."
The story the excerpt is from is "Wheels of Change." The women in the excerpt introduced new styles and had shortened lengths of clothing. This caused other women to want to change the way they wore clothing also. They did this to be comfortable and for their physical well being. In the story, it speaks about how dangerous it is for women to wear long dresses when riding bicycles since they would get caught up in the chains and cause accidents.
Learn more about the story "Wheels of Change" at brainly.com/question/5996145
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Answer:
I have an answer for that it important because its history it's from when we did not have electricity and all of those fancy gadgets
Explanation:
Persian empire and byzantine empire hope this helps
Answer:
Iran
Explanation:
The war in Afghanistan was a war that initially faced the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, ruled by the Taliban, and, once overthrown, its insurgency, on the one hand, and an international coalition commanded by the United States, for control of the Afghan territory, and that continues as War of Afghanistan (2015-present). It began on October 7, 2001 with the "Operation Enduring Freedom" of the US Army and "Operation Herrick" of British troops, launched to invade and occupy the Asian country. The invasion was unleashed in response to the attacks of September 11, 2001 in the United States, of which this country blamed Osama bin Laden. To begin the invasion, the United States relied on a peculiar interpretation of Article 51 of the Charter of the United Nations, on the right to self-defense.
The declared objective of the invasion was to find Osama bin Laden and other al Qaeda leaders to bring them to trial, and to overthrow the government of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan ruled by the emir mullah Omar, who in the opinion of the Western powers supported and gave refuge and coverage of Al Qaeda members. The Bush Doctrine of the United States declared that, as a policy, no distinction would be made between terrorist organizations and nations or governments that give them refuge.