Answer:
FALSE
Explanation:
`The Restoration brought back Monarchy to England, Wakes, Scotland and Ireland on May 8th, 1660. Charles II was crowned king of England. The restoration took a lot of work, the structure that existed before the Commonwealth was restored, the House of Lords of reinstalled, the Church of England was restored and the ministers too.
The Parliament of England passed the Act of Uniformity in 1662 that prescribed the form of public prayers, administration of sacraments and other rites of the Church of England.
When other clergymen such as Presbyterians refused to take the oath they were expelled of their positions in an episode known as the Great Ejection.
It depends on what penalties, and the severity of the student cheating.
So, the student is cheating on something minor, something unimportant, then I don't think they need to be kicked out of class just for that, but maybe get a 0 on that whole thing and that will teach them a lesson.
If the student is cheating on something important (excluding big tests), then the school should probably: A, give them a 0 on it or B, move them down to a lower level so the student feels like they don't have to cheat.
The worst thing they could do is cheat on a really big test like an exam, then they will probably end up with a big fat 0 on it all and flunk that class, or get kicked out of class.
Lots of people (adults and kids) think that penalties should be easier on the kids, but I don't agree with that. If the kid has done something wrong, then the kid needs to pay for their actions and deal with the consequences.
Wheee are the examples????
<h2><em><u>Hiram Revels</u></em></h2><h2 />
hope it helps you
Answer:
It is a good with a negative cross elasticity of demand
Explanation: