C. The ideas expressed by president Woodrow during and after the First World War
<span>The Second Great Awakening is largely associated with revivals in barns and other large areas, where people were wildly preached to, people claimed to be healed, and fire and brimstone were only steps away. Many of the early utopian ideas in the United States involved religious groups breaking away from the rest, like Mormonism, and they instituted events similar to revivals as they crossed the country.</span>
Answer:
'Their diet was mainly meat and wild animals.' Hunter Gatherers
'They owned land and property' Farmers
'They depended in domesticated plants and animals for food.' Farmers
'They did not own many things.' Hunter Gatherers
Explanation:
1. Farmers would live off of domesticated animals, not wild.
2. Hunter Gatherers had to gather things, so they most likely wouldn't stay in one place for long. And farmers need land to farm.
3. Farmers tend to not hunt, but keep lifestock.
4. Like what I said about two, they had to go hunt for their food, and owning a bunch of idioms would make on the go trips slow and weigh the person down.
The Monroe Doctrine declared<span> that </span>an<span>y nation enacted any unwanted advances </span>among<span> the </span>New World<span> as an act of aggression toward the </span>united states<span>. </span><span>The </span>Monroe Doctrine conjointly believed that each country has a right to defend itself from any outside invasion. He also promised to protect America from the invasion of British or any other country to be its colony.<span> This was </span>an awfully generous<span> </span>supply to all or any collection<span> countries </span>among the Americas<span>.</span>
By reading the passage we can figure out that the word "betwixt" means something similar to "between". We can infer this because the author tells us that he was on a passage, in a passage you can move only forward or backward. The author began to "crept aft", meaning he moved to the back of the boat, so he moved trough the passage. Then he says "till there warn't but one stateroom betwixt me and the cross-hall of the texas." Here we can see that he wants to go somewhere, or that there is an end to the passage, the end is "the cross-hall". So the narrator is in Place A., the "cross-hall" place C., and in between them is "one stateroom".