World War I started in July 28, 1914 and ended in November 11, 1918
Answer:ye ye i want them to be able to finish my quiz
Explanation:free points
This would be said by the marxist, socialist sociological perspective. They would most likely argue that educational inequalities are there in place to reinforce the upper echelons of society so that the divison between the working class and the burgeois will always remain and be in favor of the latter.
Answer:
here's just two of multiple :)
Explanation:
1. College really is us shaping our own life and we don't want to mess that up
2. We're in a new place with people we don't know
Answer:
1. Cotton Gin: In colonial times, cotton cloth was more expensive than linen or wool because of the extreme difficulty of separating seed from the clinging fibers. One man could pick the seeds from only about 1 pound of cotton fiber per day.
2. Reaper/Binder: Small grains had been harvested by hand for centuries, cut with sickles or scythes, hand-raked and tied into sheaves. Grain harvesting machines first appeared in Great Britain in about 1800, and in the U.S. a decade or two later, but most failed. Obed Hussey and Cyrus McCormick developed successful reapers during the 1830s.
3. Thresher: When grain was being cut by hand, the method for separating the kernels from the straw was equally slow and labor intensive. Grain was hauled to a barn where it was spread on a threshing floor and either beaten with hand flails or trampled by animals. That knocked the kernels free of the straw, which was then raked away. The remaining mixture was winnowed by tossing it into the air where the wind was relied upon to blow the chaff and lighter debris away from the heavier grain, which fell back onto the threshing floor.
4. Combined Harvester-Thresher: By the 1920s the steam traction engine was on it's way out, but it paved the way for the gasoline tractors that followed.
Explanation:
i have more like...
**Steam Engine**
**Auto Truck**
**Gasoline Tractor**
**General Purpose Tractor**
**Hydraulic Implement Lift with Draft Control**