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cupoosta [38]
3 years ago
10

Where was the ancient region of Mesopotamia located?

Social Studies
1 answer:
Irina-Kira [14]3 years ago
8 0
<h3>Answer#1</h3><h2>(C) Middle East</h2>

Mesopotamia is a word used to indicate to an ancient region found on the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, which presently prevails in the modern-day Middle East. The area matches to most places of modern-day Iraq as well as portions of Iran, Kuwait, Syria, and Turkey. Mesopotamia is famous in past for being the foundation of civilization as it was the place of important advancements during history.


<h3>Answer#2</h3><h2>(B)Cuneiform</h2>

Cuneiform is a practice of writing initially explained by the classical Sumerians of Mesopotamia 3500-3000 BCE. It is thought to be the most important among the various cultural offerings of the Sumerians and the highest among those of the Sumerian city of Uruk which promoted the writing of cuneiform.


<h3>Answer#3</h3><h2>(C) Phoenicia</h2>

Phoenicia is an old Greek word used to connect to the significant export of the country, textiles dyed Tyrian purple from the Murex mollusc, and related to the main Canaanite port towns; not answering specifically to Phoenician art as a whole as it would have been known natively. Their civilization was established in city-states, comparable to those of old Greece, perhaps the most important of which were Tyre, Sidon, Arwad, Berytus, Byblos and Carthage.


<h3>Answer#4</h3><h2>(D) Tigris and Euphrates</h2>

The valleys of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers made various productive regions in the Fertile Crescent. The old civilization of Mesopotamia grew in the land within the two rivers. The Fertile Crescent (also known as the "origin of civilization") is a crescent-shaped area where farming and old human civilizations like the Sumer and Ancient Egypt grew due to floods from the surrounding Nile, Euphrates and Tigris rivers.


<h3>Answer#5</h3><h2>(C) Exodus</h2>

The Exodus is the originating story of the Israelites. Published over the books of Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy, it speaks of the subjection that befell the children of Israel in Egypt, their freedom through the support of Yahweh and the prophecies at Sinai, and their wanderings in the wilderness up to boundaries of Canaan, the land their God has given them.


<h3>Answer#6</h3><h2>(A) Alphabets with 22 character</h2><h2>(D) Monotheistic religious belief</h2>

A reasonably small group of tradesmen and merchants are identified as the Phoenicians built the foundation for the contemporary English alphabet and other alphabets. They created a system of 22 consonants into what became the alphabet used not only by English lecturers but by lecturers of many of the world's languages. These Phoenician sites were often in opposition with each other for power of the region. Because of this absence of cooperation, the Phoenicians were captured and compelled to pay tribute to the practice every empire in the region, including the Egyptians, Hittites, Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, and Greeks.


<h3>Answer#7</h3><h2>(A) His code of law</h2>

Hammurabi, the ruler of Babylon, is best remembered for the construction of a code of laws recognised as the Code of Hammurabi, which was practised to control Mesopotamian community. Hammurabi was born circa 1810, BCE, in Babylon, now modern day Iraq. He modified an unpredictable number of city-states into a powerful empire that crossed ancient Mesopotamia. Hammurabi’s abiding contribution to the western community was his set of laws written on twelve stones and presented candidly for all to see.


<h3>Answer#8</h3><h2>(C) Development of Iron</h2><h2>(E) Use of cavalry and chariot forces</h2>

The Assyrian war machine was the most effective military force in the ancient world up until the fall of the empire in 612 BCE. The intrigue to its success was a professionally equipped standing army, iron weaponry, excellent engineering skills, useful tactics, and, most importantly, a complete ruthlessness which came to characterize the Assyrians to their neighbours and citizens and still adds itself to the reliability of Assyria in the modern day.


<h3>Answer#9</h3><h2>(C) It established a highly skilled professional army built around elite units.</h2>

The Persian Empire is the title given to a set of dynasties centred in modern-day Iran that crossed several centuries—from the sixth century B.C. to the twentieth century A.D. The original Persian Empire, established by Cyrus the Great around 550 B.C., became one of the greatest empires in history, ranging from Europe’s Balkan Peninsula in the West to India’s Indus Valley in the East. This Iron Age dynasty, sometimes called the Achaemenid Empire, was a global hub of culture, faith, science, art and technology for more than 200 years.


<h3>Answer#10</h3><h2>(D) The is just one supreme god, but he has an evil opposite. </h2>

Zoroastrianism, or Mazdayasna, is one of the world's greatest religions that persists till date. It is a monotheistic belief (i.e. a single creator god), centred in a dualistic cosmology of good and evil and an eschatology predicting the final end of evil.  Important characteristics of Zoroastrianism, such as messianism, punishment after death, paradise and hell, and independent mind have affected other religious systems.

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Which sentence contains a dangling​ modifier? A. Having done well on her​ research, she earned an A on the paper. B. Preparing f
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<h3>Modifiers</h3>

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Preparing for the​ experiment, several slides were fixed with dye  contains a dangling modifier. "Preparing for experiment" is  expressing an action, but the person experimenting is not known.  Since the person performing the experiment is not known the phrase "<em>preparing for the experiment</em>" is considered a dangling modifier because it is not modifying any word in the sentence.

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What strategy is being describe below?
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its b and here is why

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Blitzkrieg /ˈblɪtskriːɡ/ (German pronunciation: [ˈblɪtskʁiːk] (About this soundlisten), from Blitz ["lightning"] + Krieg ["war"]) is a method of warfare where the attacker, spearheaded using a force concentration of armoured and motorised or mechanised infantry formations with close air support, breaks through the opponent's line of defence by short, fast, powerful attacks and then dislocates the defenders, using speed and surprise to encircle them with the help of air superiority.[1][2][3] Through the employment of combined arms in manoeuvre warfare, blitzkrieg attempts to unbalance the enemy by making it difficult for it to respond to the continuously changing front, then defeat it in a decisive Vernichtungsschlacht (battle of annihilation).[2][3][4][5]

During the interwar period, aircraft and tank technologies matured and were combined with systematic application of the traditional German tactic of Bewegungskrieg (maneuver warfare), deep penetrations and the bypassing of enemy strong points to encircle and destroy enemy forces in a Kesselschlacht (cauldron battle).[3][6] During the Invasion of Poland, Western journalists adopted the term blitzkrieg to describe this form of armoured warfare.[7] The term had appeared in 1935, in a German military periodical Deutsche Wehr (German Defence), in connection to quick or lightning warfare.[8] German manoeuvre operations were successful in the campaigns of 1939–1941 and by 1940 the term blitzkrieg was extensively used in Western media.[9][10] Blitzkrieg operations capitalized on surprise penetrations (e.g., the penetration of the Ardennes forest region), general enemy unreadiness and their inability to match the pace of the German attack. During the Battle of France, the French made attempts to re-form defensive lines along rivers but were frustrated when German forces arrived first and pressed on.[10]

Despite being common in German and English-language journalism during World War II, the word Blitzkrieg was never used by the Wehrmacht as an official military term, except for propaganda.[9] According to David Reynolds, "Hitler himself called the term Blitzkrieg 'A completely idiotic word' (ein ganz blödsinniges Wort)".[11] Some senior officers, including Kurt Student, Franz Halder and Johann Adolf von Kielmansegg, even disputed the idea that it was a military concept. Kielmansegg asserted that what many regarded as blitzkrieg was nothing more than "ad hoc solutions that simply popped out of the prevailing situation". Student described it as ideas that "naturally emerged from the existing circumstances" as a response to operational challenges.[12] The Wehrmacht never officially adopted it as a concept or doctrine.[a]

In 2005, the historian Karl-Heinz Frieser summarized blitzkrieg as the result of German commanders using the latest technology in the most beneficial way according to traditional military principles and employing "the right units in the right place at the right time".[13] Modern historians now understand blitzkrieg as the combination of the traditional German military principles, methods and doctrines of the 19th century with the military technology of the interwar period.[14] Modern historians use the term casually as a generic description for the style of manoeuvre warfare practised by Germany during the early part of World War II, rather than as an explanation.[b] According to Frieser, in the context of the thinking of Heinz Guderian on mobile combined arms formations, blitzkrieg can be used as a synonym for modern manoeuvre warfare on the operational level.

8 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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