Strong ties to the English crown -- that was not a factor in the success of the colonies. In fact, the reality was just the opposite. The colonies were very loosely connected back to the home government in England. They developed their own forms of self-government within each of the colonies, which also featured different religious practices (based on groups who had come to the New World to escape religious pressures in England). The "new" this and "new" that featured in your question is a clue to all that was happening in the novel enterprise that was the American colonial experience. This new form of life would eventually challenge any oversight by the English monarch, and the United States of America became its own nation.
Answer:
The correct answer is option:
<u>O an area between the trenches
.</u>
Explanation:
In World War I, no man's land was the area between the trenches of the opposing armies on the western front.
Trench warfare was horrible and bloody in the First World War. The armies had dug into trenches facing each other, and any attempts to break out and assault the other side usually meant the fire of machine guns being mowed down.
For first-hand accounts of the suffering of the trench warfare, you might want to check out All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque (1929).
You may want to check out All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque (1929) for first-hand accounts of the suffering of the trench warfare.
It doubles the United States.
Usually, that refers to a government that is a dictatorship or autocracy.