It's not A or D, I had this same question,It's either B or C. Hope this helped
<span>Whigs stood for protective tariffs, national banking, and federal aid for internal improvements. Senators Henry Clay and Daniel Webster were prominent Whigs, as were four presidents (William Henry Harrison, John Tyler, Zachary Taylor, and Millard Fillmore). The party fell into disunity in the 1850s.</span>
The reason why Hoover was able to get elected and survive for some time during the Great Depression was his support for Unions.
<h3 /><h3>Why did Hoover get elected?</h3>
Hoover was a charismatic man but it was his support for Union rights that got him elected as president.
This support allowed him to convince Unions to give him some time to fix things during the Great Depression and so he survived for longer than he should have.
Find out more on Herbet Hoover at brainly.com/question/12255447
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Answer:
As the first philosophers, they emphasized the rational unity of things and rejected supernatural explanations, instead seeking natural principles at work in the world and human society. The pre-Socratics saw the world as a kosmos, an ordered arrangement that could be understood via rational inquiry.
Explanation:
I hope one of these helps sorry if they dont
cemented Pan-Hellenic identity, saw cooperation on an unprecedented scale, showed Greek military superiority over the Persians. Athens emerged as the rivals of Sparta for military prestige.
The Battle of Marathon was significant because it proved to the Greeks that the Persians were not 'invincible', which boosted the moral of the Greek troops, increasing their confidence to incline themselves in a common cause if the Persian attacked again (which I believe they would).
Battle of Marathon, (September 490 bce), in the Greco-Persian Wars, decisive battle fought on the Marathon plain of northeastern Attica in which the Athenians, in a single afternoon, repulsed the first Persian invasion of Greece.
The significance of the battle for Western Civilization
While the Battle of Thermopylae was technically a defeat for the Greeks, it was also a victory in the long run because it marked the beginning of several important Greek victories against the Persians and boosted the morale of all the Greek city-states