Answer:
Latin is where we can find the etymological origin of the word continuity that we will now proceed to analyze. It emanates from “continuitas”, which can be translated as “quality of not being interrupted” and which is composed of the following parts:
• The prefix "con-", which is equivalent to "together".
• The verb "tenere", which is synonymous with "retain" or "dominate."
• The suffix “-uo”, which is used to indicate relationship.
The Brown vs Board of Education legal case was a very important part of history which essentially ended segregation among blacks and whites in schools and started to integrate them together.
Brown vs Board of Education started in the 1950's when a young African American girl had to walk over a mile to school everyday, but there was a school for whites very close by.
This was when the NAACP, which advocated for the rights and freedoms of colored people came in. They believed segregation among schools and "separate but equal" was in fact <em>not</em> equal.
Eventually, the Brown vs Board of Education case went to the Supreme Court, when finally in 1954 the case was won by the NAACP and integration between public schools began.
Many citizens and schools were against integration and many more rulings with the Supreme Court had to occur, but finally a few decades later all of the public schools in the United States were integrated among races and the "separate but equal" principle was no longer.
B. Explained how rulers get to keep power!
The Cherokee people called this journey the "Trail of Tears," because of its devastating effects. Over 4,000 of the 15,000 cherokee's died.