Answer:
Eastern Bloc was the name that the NATO and the Western Europe used to call the Eastern European nations that was occupied and subsequently fell under the Soviet Union's hegemony.
However, the term Eastern Bloc was used to collectively call any Communist nation afterwards. But when the term Eastern bloc is used, it mainly meant the Eastern European nations.
Since you have not given any options, following are the Eastern European nations that were under the communist influence after the world war 2.
East Germany, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia and Albania
The Eastern bloc slowly disintegrated with fall of the communism in Easter Europe and eventually came to an end when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991.
Explanation:
Following are some of the other communist countries from that era in other continents.
Mongolian People's Republic, the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, the Lao People's Democratic Republic and the People's Republic of Kampuchea, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, and the People's Republic of China
Republic of Cuba
Child labour was common
the children didnt received education bevause they were workin to support the family
the working day was estremely long and with harsh conditions...
workers didnt had any rights.or.strike...
if u broke a machine u were killed...
Answer:
C) State Representation in Congress
Explanation:
The Virginia Plan advocated for two legislative houses of which membership would be based on population. The New Jersey Plan advocated for one legislative house of which membership would be equal for all states.
- Hope this helps.
A. Cash crops such as tobacco and sugar required many workers.
The map below shows us the migratory patterns of the Indo-Europeans, and with their migrations, the spread of the their language as well. As the Indo-Europeans started to migrate from their homeland in the lowlands between the Black and Caspian seas, they were spreading their culture with them. This led to their language seemingly distant regions that do not seem connected. As they were moving in different areas, Europe, India, Iran, Central Asia, their language started to change, so lot of new dialects emerged, and later those dialects gave birth to new languages, though all of those languages kept their basis and remained part of the same linguistic family.