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Marizza181 [45]
3 years ago
11

Heyy! please help i’ll give brainliest asap

History
2 answers:
Nitella [24]3 years ago
4 0
The growth of the city populations.

I’m sure of the answer, I found the test !
Zolol [24]3 years ago
4 0

Answer: The growth of city populations

Explanation: When agricultural techniques advance, there'll be a surplus of food and cattle. Surplus means more of something. When there's a surplus of food and cattle, people would be able to eat and survive. Compared to a place with scarce food, people living in Ancient Egypt definitely had a bigger number of people being born.

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What changes occurred when human civilization evolved from hunters-gatherers to settle societies?
yulyashka [42]
More and more people started growing crops so the people didn't have to keep hunting animals.

They still hunted just not all the time.

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Which of these actions reflects the philosophy of capitalism
QveST [7]

Even though there are no answer choices, here is some information that can help!


- Capitalism is an economic system based on the following principles:

1) Little government interference in the economy- Capitalists belief that competition among businesses will help to keep prices low and will prevent them from acting illegally.


2) Individual freedom- In a capitalist system, individuals can spend their money on whatever they like.


3) Supply and demand- The amount of resources created by businesses is driven by the consumer. If there are products that people buy an extraordinary amount of, businesses will continue to produce it at a high rate. The opposite is true as well.



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3 years ago
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What was the signifcance of the Raj?
Anna71 [15]

The raj was intended to increase Indian participation in governance, but the powerlessness of Indians to determine their own future without the consent of the British led to an increasingly adamant national independence movement.

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How were freed blacks treated in northern cities?
zhenek [66]
Independent African-Americans were treated much better in the North than in the South. 
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3 years ago
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Do you think Canada played a greater role in fighting OR on the homefront during WWII. Use specific details and your own ideas t
Gnesinka [82]
Canada, of its own free will, entered the war in September 1939 because it then realized that Nazi Germany threatened the very existence of Western civilization.
Almost from the beginning Canadians were in the thick of the fighting—in the air. In that element the Dominion made its most striking contribution to the general war effort. On the outbreak of hostilities, the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan was established in Canada to develop the air forces of Britain, Australia, and New Zealand, as well as of Canada. It was under the direction of the Royal Canadian Air Force, and it cost the Canadian government well over 1.5 billion dollars.
Here it may be well to note that Canada’s population is only about one-eleventh that of our country. We have to multiply Canadian figures by eleven, therefore, to get the approximate American equivalent of Canada’s war effort.
By 1944, the Royal Canadian Air Force had a strength of more than 200,000. This was only a part of what Canada did in this line, for at the same time nearly half the ground crew personnel and more than a quarter of the air crew strength of the Royal Air Force were also Canadians.
The Royal Canadian Navy, which started from scratch in 1939, grew to 700 ships and 95,000 men. This force too was in the fight from almost the beginning. It participated in the daring rescue at Dunkirk, and it took over more and more of the Allied convoy work across the north Atlantic—half of it by 1943 and most of it by the end of 1944.
The Canadian army numbered in 1944 about half a million men, five-sixths of whom had volunteered for overseas service. Some of it formed most of the force that suffered disaster at Dieppe in the summer of 1942. Some fought alongside Americans and British in Sicily and Italy. But the main military effort of the Canadians began in June 1944 with the landing on the beaches of Normandy, and continued with the fight across France and into Germany.
Canadian units were out in Hong Kong when the Japs attacked it on Pearl Harbor Day, and the Canadian declaration of war against Japan was made the evening before our declaration. A battalion of Canadian troops took part in the landing on Kiska in the Aleutian Islands.
Canada did not receive a cent of lend-lease aid from us. Instead of receiving, she supplied it to the United Nations. The total at the end of 1944 was some 4 billion dollars, which is more dollars per capita than our lend-lease contribution. On the economic side, the war placed a more severe strain on Canadians than on us. The average Canadian citizen paid more taxes and, on the whole, was subject to more rigid controls. He knows what the war cost and, let us be frank, he knew it longer than we did.
Canada’s place in the world is much bigger than it ever was before. Though not a great power, Canada is no longer a small one. It is one of the middle powers—perhaps the strongest of them—and as such is bound to play an important part in the affairs of the world.
In the organization of UNRRA, the “world community chest,” Canada has stood next to the United States and the United Kingdom.
The Bretton Woods Agreement on international monetary stabilization embodies much of the plan submitted by Canada.
Canadians played a leading role in the Chicago conference on international civil aviation; and the conference selected Canada as the seat of the interim organization, which is to prepare the way for the new world organization that will regulate civil aviation.
Canada also left its stamp upon the work of the San Francisco Conference, particularly the constitution of the Economic and Social Council. The General Assembly of the United Nations Organization early in 1946 elected Canada a member of the Economic and Social Council.
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