Answer:During one bitterly cold winter, Prometheus watched the mortals huddle together like a pack of animals to keep warm. "They need to have fire returned to earth," he thought. So he decided to ignore Zeus' decree, no matter the risk. Prometheus lit a torch with the fire from the wheels of the chariot that carried the sun across the sky. He brought the flaming torch to earth and delivered fire to the mortals. As a result, life on earth was transformed. Not only did fire keep people warm, it also enabled them to cook food for the first time, as well as smoke the food and preserve it for later use. With the heat of the fire, they could even smelt metals and turn them into tools to use for farming.
Explanation:
Assuming you mean the Ottoman Empire, the Turks had a massively different mindset. The Byzantine were not religiously tolerant and they actively sought out the conversion of the Turks and other Muslim population. While the ottomans actively gave control of their own land to the Dhmiri a christian estate that payed moderate taxes for religious freedoms. Also the Byzantines had no African or Asian Ambitions like the Ottomans. The Greeks were more interested in Italy the anything else. The Ottomans on the other hand set up one of the largest transcontinental empire ever seen.<span />
Answer:
b. signed by both parties
Explanation:
The Uniform Commercial Codes includes the law of frauds. This is a state law which generally requires a certain contracts that is in writing and is signed by one of the parties to be enforceable.
It states that a sales agreement which is of $500 or more than that must be evidenced in a written form. The Uniform Commercial Codes confirmation memorandum of merchants allows that two parties or merchants having an oral agreement is bound to have a memo or a letter which is signed by only one party and which stands without objection for at least ten days.
Hence, confirmation memorandum signing by both the two parties is not requirement in UCC.
Thus the correct option is (b).
<span>The terms anno Domini (AD) and before Christ (BC) are used to label or number years in the Julian and Gregorian calendars. The term anno Domini is Medieval Latin and means "in the year of the Lord", but is often translated as "in the year of our Lord"
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