The details in the excerpt support the central idea that Ptolemy was a great king in that they provide specific examples of Ptolemy’s greatness (A).
Through a rhetorical device called enumeration, the text lists the reasons why Ptolemy is viewed as a great king. We are told that:
- he stopped conscription into the navy, which means forcing people to enroll ("impressment for the navy shall no longer be employed");
- he prevented invasions of the kingdom by marine or ground routes ("cavalry and infantry forces and ships should be sent out against those who invaded Egypt by sea and by land");
- he invested in the protection of the nation ("laying out great sums ... in order that the temples and all those who are in the land might be in safety").
The last sentence indicates that these feats have earned him the favor of the gods, who ensure that he remains a mighty king ("the gods have given him health, victory, and power").
The Twenty-second amendment is the one that limits the time one can be the President of the United States - to two terms.
<span>So if a president is accused of breaking this amendment, he or she would be trying to c. run for a third term. - so if now President Obama would run again, he could be accused of this. </span>
<span>Missouri Compromise
Compromise of 1850
Kansas-Nebraska Act
</span><span>Fugitive Slave Act
Nat Turner's Rebellion</span>
He had been called to Worms, Germany, to appear before the Diet (assembly) of the Holy Roman Empire and answer charges of heresy.
Answer:
Currently no one knows who fired the shot. Many theories were put out, but it is still a mystery.
Explanation: