Bias, or people making history in the eyes of how they saw it.
Answer:
Lady Catherine objects to Elizabeth's family because of their want of fortune and their want of connections, especially on the side of Elizabeth's mother, whose family is in trade and law. She finally objects because of Lydia's scandalous elopement, which was only patched up into a marriage at great expense to her uncle.
Explanation:
socratic helps with school work too! if you cant find it here it might be there.. id put the answer here if i knew it but you dont have the answer options..
Answer:
The first option. In a command economy, citizens have fewer property rights. In a mixed market economy, citizens have more property rights.
Explanation:
A command economy is run by the government and is used mostly in communistic countries. While mixed market economies are used by socialist and capitalistic countries due to the amount of control given to the people, the government has some control but most of it belongs to the people. Things like property rights, the choice of what to buy or sell, and the ability to choose where you operate your business.
Answer:
Portuguese discoveries (Portuguese: Descobrimentos portugueses) are the numerous territories and maritime routes recorded by the Portuguese as a result of their intensive maritime exploration during the 15th and 16th centuries. Portuguese sailors were at the vanguard of European exploration, chronicling and mapping the coasts of Africa, Canada, Asia, and Brazil, in what became known as the Age of Discovery. Methodical expeditions started in 1419 along West Africa's coast under the sponsorship of prince Henry the Navigator, with Bartolomeu Dias reaching the Cape of Good Hope and entering the Indian Ocean in 1488. Ten years later, in 1498, Vasco da Gama led the first fleet around Africa to India, arriving in Calicut and starting a maritime route from Portugal to India. Portuguese explorations then proceeded to southeast Asia, where they reached Japan in 1542, forty-four years after their first arrival in India.[1] In 1500, the Portuguese nobleman Pedro Álvares Cabral became the first European to discover Brazil.