Answer: power to declare an executive action unlawful
Explanation:
The options include:
A. power to ratify treaties
B. power to approve executive appointments
C. power to appropriate funding
D. power to impeach
E. power to declare an executive action unlawful
Some of the checks that the Congress has on the executive include:
• power to ratify treaties
• power to approve executive appointments
• power to appropriate funding
• power to impeach
It should be noted that the Congress doesn't have the power to declare an executive action unlawful.
Answer:
A. The President stays in close contact with military leaders.
Explanation:
The President's role of Commander in Chief is the top of the pyramid role in the pyramid of military ranks. He has the highest authority, so as the highest authority, he must lead mid level ranks [such as Generals] in leadership, planning, and etc.
Wives were expected to obey their husbands.
Around that time period it was considered improper for a wife to disobey their husbands. Wives at the time period had very few rights and were dependent on their husbands.
In Ming painting, the traditions of both the Southern Song painting academy and the
Yuan
(1279–1368)
scholar-artist
were developed further. While the Zhe (Zhejiang Province) school of painters carried on the descriptive, ink-wash style of the Southern Song with great technical virtuosity, the Wu (Suzhou) school explored the expressive calligraphic styles of Yuan scholar-painters emphasizing restraint and self-cultivation. In Ming scholar-painting, as in
calligraphy
, each form is built up of a recognized set of brushstrokes, yet the execution of these forms is, each time, a unique personal performance. Valuing the presence of personality in a work over mere technical skill, the Ming scholar-painter aimed for mastery of performance rather than laborious craftsmanship.
Early Ming decorative arts inherited the richly eclectic legacy of the Mongol Yuan dynasty, which included both regional Chinese traditions and foreign influences. For example, the fourteenth-century development of blue-and-white ware and
cloisonné
; enamelware arose, at least in part, in response to lively trade with the Islamic world, and many Ming examples continued to reflect strong