Answer:
Only in temples
Explanation:
That's why the temples where built, besides holding gold and such...
Assuming that you are referring to the territories of today's Mexico, formerly know as <em>New Spain</em>, here is the paragraph:
As Hernan Cortes campaigned throughout the first continental lands of America, the idea that many Spaniards, probably even himself, harbored was that of founding Spain all over again in the newly found and conquered lands. A mix of nostalgia and pride for the Motherland, Spain, must have prompted the <em>Conquistadors</em> to name the cities and provinces they founded after cities and provinces already existing in Spain. One reason for using already familiar names had to do with the difficulty of pronouncing the original names of the places given by the native people, the other one had to do with a sense of control, since most people hold the belief that naming things bestows them with a degree of control over them. And yet another reason may have been the comfort of living in places named after their old home towns and provinces the Spaniards had come from.
<span>B. returning Montreal to the French</span>
Answer:
most basic safety and security rights
rights unlisted in the Constitution
freedom of expression rights
rights listed in the Bill of Rights
The correct answer should be an implicit idea found in things such as allegories. It's like watching a fable, it's not really about the animals but rather it has a meaning that is understood by us and that is implicit, not explicitly said. Implicit ideas are common and are used in almost all works of art, from writing to painting to sculpting.