Answer:
The Gothic Line represented one of the last and great defenses elaborated by the Germans in World War II.
Theoretically constructed on a length of 280 km, the series of Nazi-fascist lines of defense in northern Italy, known as the Gothic Line, departed from the coastal region of the Tyrrhenian Sea, from the Italian west, in the regions of Carrara and La Spezia, passing through the chain of mountains formed by the Apennines, ending in the east, in the areas of Pesaro and Rimini, already in the coastal strip of the Adriatic Sea. Its main purpose was to delay to the maximum, and if possible to block, the allied advances in the Campaign of Italy.
The deductible.
On insurance policies, the deductible is an amount that the individual must pay of their own expenses before the insurance policy covers any costs. After meeting the deductible amount, most insurance policies then have a ratio of how they will pay expenses -- for instance, 80% paid by the insurer, 20% by the individual. For some sorts of expenses (listed in the policy) insurers will cover the whole amount.
Since you asked this question in the history area, let's note a little history. The first health insurance sort of coverage in the United States was accident insurance, offered by a company founded in 1850 that covered persons injured in railroad or steamboat accidents. General health insurance covering sickness and such didn't begin in the US until after 1890. Today, we've come to expect health insurance as a part of everyone's life and budget -- indeed, the Affordable Care Act of 2010 made it a legal requirement for Americans to carry health insurance or else pay a tax penalty if they did not. But health insurance wasn't always such a common commodity.
Carrie Chapman Catt was an American women's suffrage leader who campaigned for the 19th Amendment to the United States Constitution, which gave <em>American women the right to vote in 1920.</em> The National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA), under the leadership of Carrie Chapman Catt, undertook campaigns to enfranchise women in individual states, going state-by-state to try and gain women's rights.
In its American colonies, Spain helped the Catholic Church meet its goal of "converting natives to Christianity" although it should be noted that the primary goal of the Spanish in the colonies was to extract gold and other riches.