The home front<span> of the United States in </span>World War II<span> supported the </span>war effort<span> in many ways, including a wide range of volunteer efforts and submitting to government-managed </span>rationing<span> and </span>price controls. Everyone<span>[citation needed]</span><span> agreed that the sacrifices were for the national good "for the duration."</span>
Answer:
1.Soldiers of the Soviet Union and the United States did not do battle directly during the Cold War. But the two superpowers continually antagonized each other through political maneuvering, military coalitions, espionage, propaganda, arms buildups, economic aid, and proxy wars between other nations. 2.The Cold War had a profound influence on the popular idea of human rights as they circulated around the world. ... Western Europe and North America wanted to define human rights in a strict political and civic sense--negative human rights like freedom of speech and property were paramount for these countries.
Answer:
A. True
Explanation:
Hebrew was an ancient language of the people of Israel. Hebrew was written before 95 AD because Clement of Rome mentions the language Hebrews in his
The Jerusalem's temple might be still standing because otherwise Elwell would have used the destruction of the temple in the year AD 70 to clinch his argument that Christ's sacrifice supersedes the temple's bloody offering Epistle to Corinthians.
Answer:1763-1931
Explanation:This might be a purely semantic point, but the British didn’t invade Canada because “Canada” didn’t exist at the time. The lands they won from the French, who also didn’t invade Canada for he same reason, became Canada because the British (mostly) made it what it is today.
As for their reasons for coming here, filthy lucre is the most common motivator of the human race, and the British were no exception. They saw an opportunity to make money from the plentiful resources and they took it because they could.
It’s the same reason, though their methods were much more barbaric, that the Spanish conquered South, Central and the Southern bit of North America: goldlust. (and tobacco, furs, exotic plants [such as indigenous spices] and anything else they considered of value.