Roman
Much of the Roman diet, at least the privileged Roman diet, would be familiar to a modern Italian. They ate meat, fish, vegetables, eggs, cheese, grains (also as bread) and legumes. Meat included animals like dormice (an expensive delicacy), hare, snails and boar.
Modern
Top it off with bread and a dessert, and that sums up a typical American meal. When I lived in Texas it was BBQ meat, usually beef brisket, pork ribs or chicken with beans and cole slaw. ... The meat is usually smothered roast beef or pork. Sometimes a baked chicken is the centerpiece or a huge meatball.
C. There are 20 marbles, and 2 of them are green, so your probability of picking out a green one is 1/10. So if you pick lots of marbles and put them back, the probability stays the same. I would say the answer is true.
I reckon B is True, too.
Answer:
See below
Explanation:
Non-alignment was a policy developed by emerging 3rd world leaders in the 1950's. It was an attempt to avoid being particularly aligned with either of the two superpowers, the USA and Soviet Union in the context of The Cold War.
Countries such as Pakistan and India, along with others such as Ghana and Indonesia sought to play off both superpowers against each other as the Americans and Soviets sought to court these emerging countries in areas such as economic relations and strategic bases.
A) The South didn't need to conquer the North to win its independence.
The South was just planning on defending itself till the North grew tired, but the North had to conquer the South to be able to reunite the Union and win the war.