Germany had formally surrendered on November 11, 1918, and all nations had agreed to stop fighting while the terms of peace were negotiated. On June 28, 1919, Germany and the Allied Nations
Adjustment and Compliance
Explanation:
The response of the South to the civil rights act can be said to be of compliance. The leaders who were vocal opposers of discrimination subsided into acceptance of the law. The act reflected a period of adjustment from the South in response to the act.
Miniscule rioting and violence were observed and some businessmen and politicians could hold up the courage to display some sort of resistance. The ban called out in support of excluding blacks was greatest in the “rim states” which included parts of modern-day Virginia, Texas, North Carolina and Florida.
<span>When William the Conqueror became King of England in 1066 he introduced a new kind of feudal system into Britain. William confiscated the land in England from the Saxon lords and allocated it to members of his own family and the Norman lords who had helped him conquer the country.</span>
Thanksgiving - Wampanoag: Thanksgiving is a popular holiday in the United States. But before the Europeans came, the Wampanoags were doing Thanksgiving beforehand, and ate dishes that we still eat on Thanksgiving today; cornbeard, turkey, dressing, cranberry sauce, etc.
Hockey - Sauk, Foxes and Assiniboine: Hovkey was originally called "Shinny", and was played with a ball made of buckskin and a curved stick. Unlike in the modern world, you can play either floor hockey or ice hockey, these Native American groups only played it in the winter.
Gumbo - Native American Choctaws: This is a very popular dish in the Southern states of America and escpecially in Lousiana. It was originally made from Native Americans, who shared the recipe with slaves and poor white farmers.
Hope this helps, have a blessed and wonderful day! :-)
- Cutiepatutie
<span>Religions
and numerals do not tend to mix. You might be talking about cultures that do
not have concepts of numerals i.e. words that designate numbers. Actually,
there are plenty of cultures that does that. For short, there are societies
where numbers and counting is non-existent. Some of these cultures include the
pre-contact Mocoví, Pilagá, Jarawara, Jabutí, Canela-Krahô, Botocudo (Krenák),
Chiquitano, the Campa languages, Arabela, Khoisan language speakers, and
Achuar. Before contact with modern civilization, these isolated cultures have
no idea about counting and numbering. It seems that counting developed in
cultures that engaged in commerce.</span>