Soldiers also made dugouts and funk holes in the side of the trenches to give them some protection from the weather and enemy fire. The front-line trenches were also protected by barbed-wire entanglements and machine-gun posts. Short trenches called saps were dug from the front-trench into No-Man's Land.
In the old times, it was used as a word for a pirate or a robber, while in the modern era, it is someone who engages in long speeches in order to prevent a bill from being voted. He essentially steals time from the parliament.
The bill of rights were made after the 1600s...so your question does not make sense
Just like Rosie The Riveter, women had to work in the factories and take over the men's work as they went off to fight. Women's rights were being recognized as they completed jobs that had before been considered impossible and improbable for women to accomplish.