When you remove a fuse from a switch and then take a resistance reading across the fuse using an Ohmmeter a good fuse will show zero or very minimal resistance.
<h3>
what is Ohmmeter?</h3>
- Electrical instruments that measure electrical resistance include ohmmeters. 
 - If a multimeter is set to measure resistance, it may also be used as an ohmmeter. 
 - The circuit or component whose resistance is to be measured receives current from an ohmmeter. 
 - Electrical resistance is measured using an ohmmeter and represented in ohms. 
 - The resistance to be measured can be connected to the instrument in parallel or in series using the simplest ohmmeters. 
 - It comes in three different varieties: series, shunt, and multi-range ohmmeters.
 
To learn more about the Ohmmeter, refer to the following link:
brainly.com/question/16726786
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Answer: D
Explanation:
I wrote the explanation in the comment section. Check it out if you want. :)
 
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Answer:
This correct answer is a.
Explanation:
Though states can pass laws which apply locally, the Federal government has the final say when there is a conflict between a Federal and a State law. The supremacy clause, article VI of the constitution, says that any Federal law that prohibits a certain practice supersedes any kind of state law. For example, if the state law permits the use of marijuana but the federal law issues a prohibition, the state should comply with the federal law or the federal government can stop the state legislation. 
 
        
             
        
        
        
<span> </span><span>The Arizona-Sonora Border:
Line, Region, Magnet, and Filter</span><span>.<span> . . Belonging truly to neither nation, it serves as a kind of cultural buffer zone for both, cultivating its own culture and traditions. Like other borders, it both attracts and repels. Like them, it is both barrier and filter. It is above all a stimulating cultural environment. . . .</span>--James S. Griffith
The Arizona Sonora border was established as a result of the Gadsden Purchase of 1853. It runs through desert and mountain country, from the western Chihuahuan Desert by New Mexico through a zone of grassland and oak-covered hills to the classic Sonoran Desert west of Nogales. The land gets more and more arid as one travels west, and the western third of the border is essentially devoid of human habitation. It is this stretch of the border, once a major road to the Colorado River, that has earned and kept the title El Camino del Diablo, "The Devil's Highway."</span>