Answer:
28. Connecticut Compromise
29. The Three-Fifths Compromise
Explanation:
The Virginia Plan proposed a bicameral legislature where both chambers were based on population.
The New Jersey Plan proposed a unicameral legislature in which each state received only 1 vote in Congress.
The Connecticut Compromise did exactly that -- created a compromise -- where a bicameral legislature was put into place, but one chamber was based on population (the House) and the other chamber gave each state two votes (the Senate).
The Three-Fifths Compromise held that slaves were counted as three fifths of a person and would have three fifths of their population represented in Congress.
The 'Great Compromise' is another name for the Connecticut Compromise.
Answer:
Options: Children were given household chores to do at age three or four.
Children were supposed to spend the majority of their time playing.
Children were required to respect their parents.
Explanation:
In colonial North Carolina, the father had full power over his family. Fathers were responsible for teaching their children, morally and mentally.
But by the age of three or four, children were assigned to small chores in the house, like gathering sticks for fires. Children also taught to knit and make stockings and caps.
Children expected to show respect for their parents. A father would punish a child for being naughty, rude, or impolite. Children supposed to do as they were told and be polite to others.
Just about every airplane flown by any nation in World War II was a propeller-driven plane. The Germans fielded the first operational jet fighter, the Messerschmitt Me 262, but it only saw partial action in World War II because it was transported late in the war and underwent from some engine issues. Here were other jet aircraft before the Me-262, but it was the first one to be delivered to the troops and used in combat operations. The first jet aircraft was the German HE 178, followed by Italian and British jets (N1 and Gloster E.28 respectively).
B. They had a good postal system,