Answer:
<u>Yes, the executive agreement by the President is valid</u>
Explanation:
An executive agreement is an agreement between the United States (made by the current president) and a foreign government that has the same force as treaties but that is less formal, does not necessarily bind the president's successor and does not need to be ratified by two-thirds of the U.S. Senate in order to become valid like treaties require.
This presidential power is not specifically stated in the U.S. Constitution, however, the president is authorized to have it as one of their powers in the area of foreign affairs. Therefore, the executive agreement that the President made with the foreign leader is completely valid.
Answer:
symbolic play
Explanation:
This is an example of symbolic game, which occurs when children use creativity to express and represent their yearnings, actions and situations that occur in their lives through figurative language, drawings and imagination.
Symbolic games are important for the development and adaptation of children, especially those from 2 to 7 years old, who are beginning to understand the real world and the established rules for life in society.
Answer:
which principle prevents a brach from abusing its power
Explanation:
1.) <span>Human georgraphy is the study of how humans have affected and been affected by the environment and why civilizations are where they are. It talks about culture, arithmetic density, migration, population, etc. Physical geography, however, is the study of the physical characteristics of Earth (minus the human aspect), such as mountains, oceans, rivers, etc.
2.) </span> A monarch is the head of a monarchy<span>, a form of government in which a state or polity is ruled by an individual who normally rules for life or until abdication, and typically inherits the throne by birth.
3.) </span><span>All of this started to filter into Europe, with some early translations in the 10th-11th centuries and a big wave in the 13th. Roger Bacon in the 13th century asserted that observation and experience were surer guides to knowledge than the authorities or pure logic relied on by most medieval thinkers. Another Bacon, Francis (not sure if there's a relation), would develop this into full-on empirical method in the 16th century. Meanwhile, medieval Europe had become very adept at borrowing technologies developed elsewhere (like gunpowder or paper) or devising its own (like the magnetic compass) and putting them to practical use. This would lead to things like the telescope which made the discoveries of Galileo possible.</span>