There are many political parties is false
Multiple Choice:
1. A
2. C
3. D
4. B
5. C
6. D
7. A
8. Europeans had set up trading posts they were no longer happy with, and European nations thought that ruling colonies all over the world increased the nation’s worth.
True/False:
1. F
2. T
3. T
4. ?
5. F
Note: this took a while, and I’m not sure if it’s right or not, but I tried c:
Japan became Asia's most powerful nation because Japan adopted Western military technologies and training methods.
<h3>How did Japan get strong?</h3>
When Japan was eventually forced to open it's borders to Western trade, it decided to never be intimidated again.
They therefore copied western training methods of armed technology which they then applied to their own army and allowed them to become much stronger.
Find out more on Japan's military at brainly.com/question/11679600.
#SPJ1
D. It led to the end of segregated public schooling in America.
<em>Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka,</em> decided by the US Supreme Court in 1954, extended civil liberties to all Americans in regard to access to education. Until that decision, it was legal to segregate schools according to race, so that black students could not attend the same schools as white students. An older Supreme Court decision, <em>Plessy v. Ferguson</em> (1896), had said that separate, segregated public facilities were acceptable as long as the facilities offered were equal in quality. In the case of <em>Brown v. Board of Education,</em> that standard was challenged and defeated. Segregation was shown to create inequality, and the Supreme Court unanimously ruled segregation to be unconstitutional. After the <em>Brown v. Board of Education</em> decision, there was a struggle to get states to implement the new policy of desegregated schools, but eventually they were compelled to do so.
Answer:
Explanation:
At the start of the Revolution the largest denominations were Congregationalists (the 18th-century descendants of Puritan churches), Anglicans (known after the Revolution as Episcopalians), and Quakers. But by 1800, Evangelical Methodism and Baptists, were becoming the fasting-growing religions in the nation.