Answer:
Nothing annoys me more than people claiming they have a "sense" about an unborn child's gender. Like the heavens opened their mystical powers and bestowed upon them a completely worthless gift.
My mother claims to have this gift. She correctly predicted the gender of my daughter, but this time around claims that the divine force field is a little fuzzy. My darling sister-in-law also claims this gift and she was right about Ellis too. She also guessed the birth date, weight and baby name and was scarily close on all of those. This time around, she is casting her lots for another girl. Also, when I was pregnant with Ellis a woman accosted me in the grocery store and told me she had "a gift" and claimed I was having a boy. I think the only gift she had was being creepy. But all in all, if we are being realistic, each time you guess a child's gender you have a 50/50 chance of being correct, which means, it's easy to be right.
And me? What do I think? I have no idea. Any inkling I have usually means I want bacon. And what gender do I want? Well, I want a brunette. I'm sick of being surrounded by blondes. So, I figured I'd try out some of those old wives tales about pregnancy to see if I can divine the gender of this child.
Explanation:
I tried
Answer:
It recognised the thirteen colonies as independent states, is the correct answer.
Explanation:
The treaty of Paris was signed in 1783 and formally ended the American Revolutionary War. It was negotiated by American politicians John Jay, Benjamin Franklin and John Adams with the representatives of King George Third. The British crown ceded most of the territory east of Mississippi river to <em>the United States and also recognised the American Independence</em>. The territories ceded by the king almost doubled the size of the nation and made way for the westward expansion. The treaty also marked the end of American revolutionary war.
Answer:
Among the several Enlightenment-era influential philosophers, I believe that <u>John Locke</u> is the one who better understood politics, and has the best conception of man's natural state. Plus, he was influential in the US political thought during the Revolution Era.
Explanation:
<u>John Locke theorized that the man, once living in the natural state, it's free, but he doesn't feel himself safe. Then, the man makes a contract with a superior authority - the State - to promote him the necessary goods. However, this contract address that the State shouldn't interfere on the man's business. It's only duty was to promote social development. Once the government didn't follow the contract, man could take off the governor and elect another one. This principle was crucial in the development of the US political thought. </u>If we compare Locke with Jean-Jacques Rousseau, for instance, we can see that Locke has a better conception about politics, and in several ways, Locke's view is more realistic. Rousseau had a romanticized point of view about society, and according to him, humans are strictly good, and they enjoy to live in the community.
Answer:
If I'm correct it is Muhammad Naguib
Explanation:
I'm learning about Egypt, and I'm pretty sure that he was the first