Answer: A wretch is someone who is so miserable and unlucky that you almost have to feel sorry for the person. You might pity the poor wretch who was fired at work over something that wasn't even his fault. Wretch traces back to the Old English word wrecca, meaning “banished person” — so no wonder a wretch is so unhappy!
Explanation: Branliest please!!
Answer:
Suppose that the local school has $1,000 dollars. It can invest those $1,000 dollars to either buy 5 surveillance cameras each costing $200, or to buy 10 brand new textbooks for the library, each costing $100.
The school is facing a trade-off between buying surveillance cameras (guns), or textbooks (butter).
If the school only buys surveillance cameras, it will not have money to buy any textbooks, and viceversa.
The school board chooses the middle ground and buys 2 surveillance cameras for $400, and 6 textbooks for $600. Now, it does not have as many surveillance cameras as possible, or as many textbooks as possible, but it has a bit of both goods.
Answer. B.
Most Georgia judges are elected through non-partisan election.
Much like how other offices are filled, justices serving on the Georgia Supreme Court are elected by the people.
<em>Hope this helped!</em>
The reasons that the Americans fought along with Colombians, Ethiopians, and Puerto Ricans, were mostly geostartegic, economic, and territorial.
They fought along with the Colombians because Colombia has an excellent geostrategic position in the continent that is not very fond of the US. So by having an ally in Colombia they were able to have much better control and to be in a much better position on the affairs in South America.
Ethiopia was a zone of interest because it is crucial as a military base that will be close to the Middle East, so having an ally in them was allowing them to build their military facilities.
Puerto Rico was a territorial zone of interest, and the US wanted to keep it under its own governing because an independent country of Puerto Rico might have gone in any direction really, and even become an ally with some of the American arch enemies, and thus becoming the ''second Cuba''.