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s2008m [1.1K]
2 years ago
10

What do George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, Alexander Hamilton, Andrew Jackson, Ulysses S. Grant, and Ben Fran

klin have in common? You can also add Franklin Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, and Dwight Eisenhower to that list if you want.
Social Studies
2 answers:
maxonik [38]2 years ago
6 0
Their faces on the dollar bills
melisa1 [442]2 years ago
3 0

Answer: their faces on dollar bills

Explanation:

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Please help! It is not for a quiz or for homework, but I am studying and I want to know the answer in case it comes up on our te
inna [77]

Answer:

Homer

Archimedes

Explanation:

hope this helps

4 0
2 years ago
Which answer is true about dark-colored surfaces? PLEASE HURRY ITS DUE NOW
jarptica [38.1K]

Option D is correct. The truth about dark-colored surfaces is Dark-colored surfaces absorb more visible light than light-colored surfaces.

<h3>What is meant by the absorption of light?</h3>

The process by which light is absorbed and transformed into energy is known as light absorption. Plants' photosynthesis serves as an illustration of this procedure. However, not only plants, but all living things and inorganic materials, absorb light.

While absorbed light is the source of energy that powers processes in the atmosphere, hydrosphere, and biosphere, reflected light bounces back into space.

Absorption: This occurs when light is changed into a different kind of energy. When light vanishes as it travels through another medium, something happens.

When light is absorbed, an item becomes black or opaque to the incoming wave's colors or wavelengths: It is impossible to see through wood. Some substances are transparent to some light wavelengths but opaque to others. Water and glass are transparent to visible light but opaque

Read more on absorption of light here:

brainly.com/question/14871680

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Which answer is true about dark-colored surfaces? When light hits a dark-colored surface, it makes the surface cooler.

Light-colored surfaces absorb more visible light than dark-colored surfaces.

Light energy is not absorbed by dark-colored surfaces.

Dark-colored surfaces absorb more visible light than light-colored surfaces. are the answers

6 0
1 year ago
What incompatible goals do you and your relational partner(s) seek?
Scrat [10]

I will be discussing my relationship with a friend and what dialectical tensions we faced altogether. So, when I first met this friend, he was a complete stranger to me and we met in a local market accidentally where our shopping bags got exchanged. We met officially to exchange bags and then got to know each other in a formal discussion. Soon, that bonding developed but there was still uncertainty about this bond

(Predictability/novelty). There was some bizarre tension in my mind to ask him out to meet again but then again it was a kind of some uncomfortable pull that didn't let me do it. When I got to know him better I soon realized that he was too open about his things and experiences and I could not be open the same way about my life(Openness/closeness). Another tension suddenly which we faced was to connect properly and that too how to maintain a bond since we shared quite a bunch of things such as the interest in similar books, TV shows, etc (Autonomy/connectedness).

Learn more about relationships here

brainly.com/question/10286547

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4 0
1 year ago
Why did the Royal Proclamation happen
Irina18 [472]
<span>The Royal Proclamation had been originally issued by King George III in 1763 to officially claim British territory in North America after Britain had won the Seven Years War.</span>
8 0
3 years ago
Why is monotheism important to Roman culture
beks73 [17]

Answer:

Monotheism, belief in the existence of one god, or in the oneness of God. As such, it is distinguished from polytheism, the belief in the existence of many gods, from atheism, the belief that there is no god, and from agnosticism, the belief that the existence or nonexistence of a god or of gods is unknown or unknowable. Monotheism characterizes the traditions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, and elements of the belief are discernible in numerous other religions.

Explanation:

Monotheism and polytheism are often thought of in rather simple terms—e.g., as merely a numerical contrast between the one and the many. The history of religions, however, indicates many phenomena and concepts that should warn against oversimplification in this matter. There is no valid reason to assume, for example, that monotheism is a later development in the history of religions than polytheism.

There exists no historical material to prove that one system of belief is older than the other, although many scholars hold that monotheism is a higher form of religion and therefore must be a later development, assuming that what is higher came later. Moreover, it is not the oneness but the uniqueness of God that counts in monotheism; one god is not affirmed as the logical opposite of many gods but as an expression of divine might and power.

The choice of either monotheism or polytheism, however, leads to problems, because neither can give a satisfactory answer to all questions that may reasonably be put. The weakness of polytheism is especially revealed in the realm of questions about the ultimate origin of things, whereas monotheism runs into difficulties in trying to answer the question concerning the origin of evil in a universe under the government of one god. There remains always an antithesis between the multiplicity of forms of the divine manifestations and the unity that can be thought or posited behind them.

The one and the many form no static contradistinction; there is, rather, a polarity and a dialectic tension between them. The history of religions shows various efforts to combine unity and multiplicity in the conception of the divine. Because Judaism and Christianity are monotheistic religions, the monotheistic conception of the divine has assumed for Western culture the value of a self-evident axiom. This unquestioned assumption becomes clear when it is realized that for Western culture there is no longer an acceptable choice between monotheism and polytheism but only a choice between monotheism, atheism, and agnosticism.

7 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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