The statement is - False.
The Egyptians, from all types of social status, were believing that there are two lives, one is here on the Earth, and the other is up in the sky with the Gods, the afterlife. They took this very seriously, and it was extremely important for them to respect the Gods and how they live in their first life on the Earth, in order to manage to get a better place and respectable place in the afterlife.
Answer:
Taiga is a life zone of vegetation, composed primarily of cone-bearing needle-leaved or scale-leaved evergreen trees. It's a forest of the cold, subarctic region. The subarctic is an area of the Northern Hemisphere that lies just south of the Arctic Circle. The taiga lies between the tundra to the north and temperate forests to the south. Alaska, Canada, Scandinavia, and Siberia have taigas.
Explanation:
...Charged very high prices to move farm products to market
The farmers felt the railroads had monopoly power over them. The farmers essentially had no choice but to send their crops to market on trains. There was not much, if any, competition on most short-line tracks that went through farm areas. Therefore, most farmers had to simply accept whatever price railroads charged to transport crops. Farmers felt the railroads could gouge them by charging high prices and that they, the farmers, had no recourse when this happened. They blamed much of their trouble on this monopoly power.
The Great Leap Forward was a colossal failure on the part of the Chinese Communist Regime.
Explanation:
Mao Zedong's scheme of the Great Leap forward relied on the labor on common land and ablution of private property in China.
The workers were to make the country into an industrial powerhouse to bring general prosperity in the nation.
However, the policies of indiscriminate industrial work without any centralized industry in place meant that the produce was of third rate, the people were often overworked and the famine that came due to less focus on agrarian setup was devastating.
More than 10 million people lost their life in the famine that was a result of the Great Leap Forward.