Answer:
Fiscal policy
Explanation:
Fiscal policy is the theory in which the government has to adjust spending levels and the tax rate. It happened to influence the monitors and the national economy. It is also called a sister strategy of the monitory policy. These both policy are very important and these policy used in various of the two direct the country economic goals.
Thus the American Society of Civil Engineers published the report card for American interest. Through the enactment of fiscal policy, The U.S government collects the tax on dollars and maintain funds.
Answer:
Expanded.
Explanation:
As the exercise briefly explains, to expand a text is to move the characters further apart but not changed in size or shape. To expand and to condense a text is similar; first: select the text you wish to expand or condense. Then, click the Dialog Box launcher in the Home tab and go to the advanced tab. From there, go to the font Dialog Box launcher and, in the spacing box, select click expanded or condensed and specify how much space you want.
<span><span><span><span><span>The Greeks had a lot of different kinds of governments, because there were many different city-states in ancient Greece, and they each had their own government. In addition, people's ideas about what made a good government changed over time.
Aristotle divided Greek governments into monarchies, oligarchies, tyrannies and democracies, and most historians still use these same divisions. For the most part, Greece began by having monarchies, then oligarchies, then tyrannies and then democracies, but at each period there were plenty of city-states using a different system, and there were many which never did become democracies or tyrannies at all.
In the Late Bronze Age (the Mycenean period), between about 2000 and 1200 BC, all Greek city-states seem to have been monarchies, ruled by kings. Homer's Iliad, and Greek mythology in general, shows us a whole series of kings like Agamemnon and Theseus, and some of their palaces have survived for archaeologists to dig up.
After the Dark Age, though, only a few Greek city-states still had kings. Sparta is the most famous of these, though actually Sparta had two kings, usually brothers or cousins, at the same time. One would stay home and the other go off to fight wars.
Most city-states in the Archaic period were ruled by oligarchies, which is a group of aristocrats (rich men) who tell everyone else what to do. Then in the 600's and 500's BC a lot of city-states were taken over by tyrants. Tyrants were usually one of the aristocrats who got power over the others by getting the support of the poor people. They ruled kind of like kings, but without any legal right to rule.
In 510 BC, the city-state of Athens created the first democratic government, and soon other Greek city-states imitated them. Even city-states that weren't Greek, like Carthage and Rome, experimented with giving the poor people more power at this time. But Athenian democracy did not really give power to everyone. Most of the people in Athens couldn't vote - no women, no slaves, no foreigners (even Greeks from other city-states), no children. And also, Athens at this time had an empire, ruling over many other Greek city-states, and none of those people living in the other city-states could vote either. Of course it is a lot easier to have a democratic government when you are only deciding what other people should do.
(And many Greek city-states kept oligarchic government, or tyrannies, or monarchies, through this whole time).
Then in the 300's BC, Greece was conquered by Philip of Macedon, and all of Greece began to be ruled by him as their king (in theory he was only leading a league of Greek city-states, but really he acted like a king). Athens and other Greek city-states still kept their local democracies or oligarchies for local government, but bigger decisions were made by Philip, and then by Philip's son Alexander the Great.
After Alexander died in 323 BC, Greece became a kingdom ruled by a series of Macedonian kings, until it was gradually taken over by the Romans between 200 and 146 BC. From 146 BC on, Greece was a province of the Roman Empire. Even after the Roman Empire in the West collapsed, Greece was still part of the Eastern Empire. In the 1100's and 1200's AD, parts of Greece were taken over by Normans, who built castles and ruled as kings.
And finally, in 1453 AD, the Turks took over and established Greece as a province in their Ottoman Empire; there was not very much change in the system of government from the Roman Empire.</span></span></span></span></span>
Answer:
The sea’s natural splendor.
Explanation:
E. M. Berens' <em>The Myths and Legends of Ancient Greece and Rome</em> presents an interesting insight into the world of the myths and legends that we know only through stories and fantasy movies. And in this text, he also provides an insight into the underwater home of the sea god Poseidon.
And in the excerpt, he describes the place as <em>"surrounded on all sides by wide fields, where there were whole groves of dark purple coralline, and tufts of beautiful scarlet-leaved plants, and sea-anemones of every tint"</em>. Moreover, there were<em> "bright, pinky sea-weeds, mosses of all hues and shades, and tall grasses,[....] fish of various kinds playfully darted in and out...</em>". Added to that <em>"fairy-like region"</em>, there was no need or shortage of light which is provided by<em> "the glow-worms of the deep"</em>. All these details <em><u>depict the sea's splendor and the ethereal-like place of the sea kingdom.
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