Answer:
C
Explanation:
larger colonies formed under European controls, reflecting the direct aid provided to African nation's.
The metaphor for the garden party in Sophie's world examples are:
"But it all seemed blurred, unreal, like a picture in the newspaper...." ...
"Little rags and shreds of smoke, so unlike the great silvery plumes that uncurled from the Sheridans' chimneys...." ...
"In the garden patches there was nothing but cabbage stalks, sick hens and tomato cans...."
After reading another chapter of Sophie's World, Hilde sits in bed. She can still picture her father reading her The Adventures of Nils aloud.
Hilde also recalls purchasing an astrology book the previous year. Her father lectured her on the folly of spiritualism and astrology.
There are only a few pages left, so Hilde continues reading. Sophie and her mother get ready for the garden party in the novel.
Sophie is questioned by Mom about the book Sophie's World by Albert Knag, which she recently purchased.
According to Sophie, Alberto gave her the book. Mom claims to have read the book's opening page, which is about a girl named Sophie Amundsen.
To learn more about Metaphor here
brainly.com/question/13020675
#SPJ4
It is C I think. Lebrian conquerors starved residents......
The Mother Country benefits from mercantilism. The Colonies serve the Mother Country by supplying raw materials to the Mother Country at a low price. The Mother Countries further controlled trade by only allowing their colony to trade with their mother country and laying tariffs on goods imported from other nations. According to mercantilism, a nation becomes wealthy by exporting more than it imports. Meanwhile, the Mother Country benefits from the resources and wealth.
The idea of being a “Protestant” is one who protests, and they did protest. they resisted many ideas of the Catholic church, including (but not limited to) having a pope, praying to dead people (“saints”), statues, ritual of the liturgy, a formal hierarchy, arbitrary and often capricious decisions of the clergy, using religion as a fund raising scheme, abuse of the powers and status of clergy, presuming to supplant the supremacy of scripture, changes of the law, parroted prayers, indulgences, and an uncountable number of other things, not the least of which was torture and killing of many millions of people who disagreed with them. Yes, they protested. They didn’t like that treatment at all. Now, many “Protestants” don’t protest hardly anything the Catholic church does, and the Catholic church in turn has become a much different sort of institution than it was in Luther’s day. Hope this helps <3