Answer:
The correct answer is A.
Explanation:
Great Britain attempted to sway the United States to support the Allies by highlighting every German atrocity inflicted on the Allies to stir up anti-German sentiment in the United States.
The victorious allied nations of World War I and World War II. In World War I, theAllies included Britain, France, Italy, Russia, and the United States. In World War II, the Allies included Britain, France, the Soviet Union, and the United States.
I found the same answer as the one who already answered
It can help the reader understand the separation of a word into its parts
The use of Blitzkreig, meaning "lightning war". This included swarms of tanks, ground troops, and bombers.
Answer:
I believe the answer is "a. Nationalism." ***I might be wrong.
Explanation:
Regarding any Indian conflict in the North American theater of the Seven Years War, the British and French were disputing over territory of the Ohio River Valley, thus showing how both countries were very greedy to obtain land for themselves and show off their prowess and superiority to each other. I feel like answer choices B and C just don't seem applicable, because the throes of the Seven Years War occurred in the midst of early imperialism, which is all about nationalism and not really about revenge, economics, or Indian conflict. Besides, this question is inaugurated with "like most wars," meaning that the answer choice must be common to wars such as World War II or the Mexican-American war. As any historian notices, nationalism is one of the most prevalent characteristics of any conflicts between multiple sovereign states.
Answer:
While Christianity is mostly a Middle-Eastern and hence an 'Asian' religion, it grew very quickly in Europe when it was adopted by the Roman Empire.
The Roman Empire spanned the whole of Europe and parts of North Africa and Middle East. As the Empire adopted the new religion, it was easily the largest Christian Empire in the world with the centre at Rome.
As the Empire receded, Rome emerged as the center of Christendom in the West, while in the East, the remains of the Roman Empire, centered around Constantinople, became the religious Centre in Asia.
Gradually, both took a different path, with Roman emerging as a Catholic power while Constantinople began a Greek orthodoxy.