Sure what on. ill try to help if ya give me a question!
Answer:
i don't think so as long as you remember it.
Explanation:
In economics, p<span>aper greatly contributed economically during Islam's Golden Age. </span>The Chinese paper making process was more efficient than parchment or papyrus. In politics, Abbasid armies expanded. Arabic was the official language of the empire and as the number of people under Islamic control grew, more people learned it. In social aspect, Al-Ma'mun founded The House of Wisdom in Baghdad.In intellectual part, <span>Al-Razi, a skillful surgeon, is the most well-known of the doctors during Islam's Golden Age. </span>
Answer:
Post-World War II Kenya
Explanation:
In the colonial period, particularly during the Second World War, many Kenyans fought alongside the British. When the war was over, these Kenyans returned home hoping they would have better jobs, better living qualities, and the control of their agricultural lands.
This was not the case, however, because the British government had plans to modernize Kenya and needed to improve the country's infrastructure, and that required labor and investment. To achieve this goal, the British have withdrawn rights and agricultural land from the Kenyan population. In addition the population was forced to work in a semi-slave regime which increased the segregation between whites and blacks.
Correct answer:
<h2>the need for a stronger central government</h2>
<em>The Federalist Papers </em>were written in support of ratifying the Constitution, and expressed well the views of the Federalists. In those essays, Alexander Hamilton, James Madison and John Jay wrote in favor of the Federalists' position on the need for a strong federal government, advocating ratification of the US Constitution which would give the federal government significantly more powers than the Articles of Confederation had.
The essays that came to be known as The Federalist Papers originally appeared in serial fashion in several newspapers. 85 essays total were then published in a 2-volume set in 1788, under the title, <em>The Federalist: A Collection of Essays, Written in Favour of the New Constitution, as Agreed upon by the Federal Convention, September 17, 1787</em>.