The answer is B hope this helped!
The answer for this one is A. <span>The inference is that investing in domestic development, like bridges and boulevards, is a privilege and not a right; it is logical because many other nations at this time were forced to spend their money to combat foreign attack.
I hope this helps you! Good luck!! :)</span>
Answer:
The election determined whether or not Eckels remained rich in the future.
Explanation:
In the first instance where the election is mentioned, Eckels states very delightedly gives thanks God that Keith won the race for the seat of the President Of The United States. Eckels states that if Keith had lost, he would have been trying to get away from the consequences of the same.
In the next instance, Eckels back from a time travel trip realizes that Keith lost the election and puts the gun to this head and "click".
According to the story, he a very rich businessman had taken to time travel as a hobby, going off into the past to shoot game.
There were certain rules that guided this endeavor. One of them was that he must not kill that he wasn't allowed or permitted to kill. Anything considered as a major disturbance to the past would affect events in the future.
Eckels somehow kills a butterfly and that results in the shift in the results of the elections by the time he gets back to the present.
Cheers
Answer:
A group of words that does not contain a subject and predicate and acts as one unit as a part of speech (noun phrase, verb phrase, prepositional phrase, verbal phrase).
Explanation:
The correct answer is B. Dante's Inferno attacks the corruption in the Catholic Church by placing many church leaders among the sinners in Hell. Dante was very active in Florentine politics, supporting the Guelphs, as did most of his family. The Guelphs were loyal to the Papacy and fought against the Ghibelines, who were on the side of the Holy Roman Emperor. After defeating the Ghibelines, the Guelphs split between the White Guelphs, which wanted more freedom from Rome, and the Black Guelphs, which remained loyal to the Pope. While the White Guelphs were victorious at first, the Black Guelphs retook power and expelled many of their enemies. Thus, Dante was exiled and would later die in Verona. He directed his resentment at the Papacy and placed many Church leaders, such as Pope Nicholas III and Pope Boniface VIII, in Hell.