That is an opinion question but I think they should not have because we lost to many men and we weren’t adjusted for that type of gorilla warfare yet.
A. Life , liberty , and the pursuit of happiness
Answer:
These are the options for the question:
A. Pathos
B. Deductive logic
C. Inductive logic
D. Ethos
And this is the correct answer:
A. Pathos
Explanation:
The word pathos comes from Greek <em>pathea</em>, whichi means "suffering".
As the etimology implies, pathos is a rethorical device that appeals to emotion. When a person in a speech uses pathos, is using language and gestures that have the goal of eliciting emotion from the audience.
That is exactly what Martin Luther King Jr is doing in the excerpt.
Q1. No all three are their own shapes some shapes can fit inside each other though but doesn’t make it a new shape
Q2. We are getting in because we are opening the doors and immediately sitting down but we get on a bus because we are stepping on to it not getting in it like we would a vehicle although it wouldn’t make sense to some it is the truth.
Q3. You’ll still have two eggs nothing is changing when you switch it to the other bowl the only thing that is changing is your bowls but the amount of eggs you have which are two will stay the same.
It's very interesting to wonder what life
would have been like in a normal Aztec
society family. There are many things we do
know, although the record is frustratingly
sparse. Record keepers were more interested
in other aspects of society, and family life was
considered the sphere of women.
Still, there are many things we do know. Like
other aspects of Aztec culture, life in an Aztec
society family was permeated by religious
beliefs, right from the start. Each decision was
ruled by the laws of religion, and often tied to
the sacred days in the Aztec calendar.
The life of a new family began at marriage,
typically in the early 20s for a man and mid-
teens for the woman. Marriages were
arranged by the relatives (though the children
may have had input). The parents would have
to talk to the religious leaders, and discuss the
signs under which both of the children had
been born. The wedding day, of course, was
chosen for similar religious reasons.
Men and women
All this was full of ceremony and form. In
Aztec society family a husband may have had
more than one wife - but it would be his
primary wife that would go through all the
ceremony. The man may have many secondary
wives, who would also be officially recognized.
The children of the principal wife would be the
inheritors - or, in the case of a ruler, only a
child from the principal wife would be a
successor. Still, the husband was supposed to
treat all wives equally in daily life.
As you may imagine, one family could grow
very large. As a result, most of the husbands
with numerous wives and children were the
wealthy ones, with the poor more likely to
have one wife.
In one sense, society was dominated by the
men. The man was considered the head of the
home. However, women had a great deal of
power as well. They may have had more power
in earlier times, with men taking more power
toward the end of the Aztec era.
Women often were able to run business out of
their homes, and had a lot of influence in the
family and the raising of children. The older
widows were much respected, and people
listened to their advice.
Adultery was a crime - death was the
punishment. Divorce was allowed on certain
grounds, presented by the man or woman,
property was divided equally and both sides
were free.