Answer:
concrete
aqueducts
flushing toilets
Explanation:
i just did it and got it right
Europeans, mainly the English and the French began trading with the Native Americans as early as the 16th century. The demand for fur was rising in Europe so the Europeans traded knives, guns and axes in return for animal pelts and furs from the Native Americans.
Answer:

Explanation:
Let's analyze each answer choice. Remember, we are looking for what life under slavery was like.
A. Slave owners discouraged slaves from adopting elements of white culture
- This is not true. Slaves were encouraged to assimilate and abandon their own African cultures.
B. Slave owners did not pay slaves for their work
- This is <u>true</u>. Slaves were treated horribly, forced to do strenuous tasks for many hours, and never compensated for their hard work.
Even though we just found the likely answer, let's check the last two.
C. Enslaved African Americans had equal rights to those of white people.
- This is absolutely false. Slaves were considered to be inferior and they had no rights, like voting or owning property.
D. Slaves had a great deal of freedom other than choosing where to work.
- This is also false. Slaves had no autonomy and every aspect of their life was controlled by the slave owner.
The correct answer is B. Slave owners did not pay slaves for their work
You ned to take a picture showing the full question, or none of the answers we give you will be accurate without knowing what it’s asking.
Answer:
Edmentum Answers:
Boy Picking Berries: A young boy squats in a field picking berries of bushes. He seems quite young to be working for a living. The conditions of the work look difficult.
Garment Workers: A mother and her two children sit in a room sewing clothes. Seeing children working at home like this indicates that there were even more child laborers than those visible in factories, farms, and street corners. I wonder whether these children have time to go to school or have to work all day.
My answers:
Nine-Year Old Newsgirl: A little girl is standing by a street trying to give out newspapers. There is a man on the side walking by that looks like he has one of her newspapers in his hands. The little girls background is dirty, and has a bunch of papers all over the ground. The girls face looks like it shows another side of her, but a sad version with her head down. She has on a coat, hat, boots, leggings, and a dress which might mean she comes from a family of wealth.
Girls at Weaving Machines: Two girls and a woman are all at weaving machines. The two girls look young and they are wearing the same outfit and ribbon in their hair. The woman at the end looks older than the two girls and she is not wearing the same outfit as the two girls. This might indicate that she is the boss of them. The first girl looks like she is weaving something while the other girl looks like she is making or folding something on a table.
The Noon Hour at Indianapolis Cannery: There a bunch of boys and two girls from small children to teens who are gathered in a line by a railroad track and train. They all look like they are posing for the picture. The two girls have on dresses, while the boys have on overalls and hats. Some of them have their arms around each other, which might mean they are close friends or related. Some of them are smiling while the others stand with a certain look on their face. The boy on top of the train looks happy and is smiling. The oldest of them all look like they are on the steps while the others on on the sidewalk and railroad track.
Explanation: Could've been better but this is what I submitted. Hope this helps!