Answer:
sang ayon...
paliwanag ang biking ay pinaniwalaang pa din ng marami nating kababayan sa pagpasintabi kapag napadaan sa isang nuno sa oh so ,kaugnayan o tabing ilog o lugar na pinamahayan ng mga engkanto.
2.di sang ayon.
paliwanag ang waiting bayan ay isang masining na paraan pagpapahayag ng sariling opinion.
3.sang ayon .
ang mga. matatanda ay naniniwala na kapag binibigkas ang biking para mabigyang banal ang mga engkanto na lumayo.
Answer:
- The Great Compromise (also known as the Connecticut Compromise)
- The Three-Fifths Compromise
The two compromises affected the way a state's representation in Congress would be determined.
Explanation:
Both of these compromises were devised during the United States Constitutional Convention in 1787.
The Great Compromise resolved a dispute between small population states and large population states. The large population states wanted representation in Congress to be based on a state's population size. The smaller states feared this would lead to unchecked dominance by the big states; they wanted all states to receive the same amount of representation. The Great Compromise created a bicameral (two-chamber) legislature. Representation in the House of Representatives would be based on population. In the Senate, all states would have the same amount of representation, by two Senators.
The Three-Fifths Compromise was a way of accounting (somewhat) for the population of slaves in states that permitted slavery. For taxation and representation purposes, the question was whether slaves should count in the population figures. (They were not considered voting citizens at that time.) The Three-Fifths Compromise said that three out of every five slaves could be counted when determining a state's population size for determining how many seats that state would receive in the House of Representatives.
Because all three of those books where written by different people that were alive during the same time. . . (Judges was multiple people)
Answer:
Difficult for him to deal with
He didn't <span>small states to leave the Convention.</span>