<span>In the late middle ages and the renaissance, the church acted as both the aggressor and victim when confronted with Europe's emerging dynastic states. It acted as a catalyst for confrontations by trying to overly exert its power as a societal structure, yet also suffered from the emergence of secularism.</span>
The British issued this, mainly to conciliate the indians by checking the enroachment of settlers on their land.
<span>The Muslim troops were under
the leadership of Salah ad-Din (Saladin) an Ayyubid sultan. They had murdered
and enslaved many Crusaders which made the Muslims a great military power in
Jersualem, the Holy Land. They had also captured other cities which sparked
what was then known as the ‘Third Crusade’.</span>
<span>A. search for a gold mine</span>
This is the sentence which contains an inappropriate shift in tense:
The dog is playing in the yard as Mrs. Smith worked in the garden.
It is not correct to use present continuous in one part of the sentence, and past simple in the other, in this case.
The possible correct forms of this sentence are:
The dog was playing in the yard as Mrs. Smith was working in the garden.
The dog played in the yard as Mrs. Smith worked in the garden.
If you're talking about World War I then the federal government implemented the Espionage and Sedition acts. These laws limited the freedom of speech for American citizens. The Espionage and Sedition Acts allowed for the arrest of individuals who spoke against the war effort or promoted avoiding the draft.
If you're referring to World War II, Japanese-American citizens had their freedoms limited after the attack on Pearl Harbor. After the attack by the Japanese military on Pearl Harbor, President Franklin Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066. This allowed the government to forcibly remove any individual in a military area. In this case, Japanese-American citizens are removed from their homes on the West Coast and forced into internment camps. These internment camps were restrictive, as Japanese-American citizens could not leave and return to their homes until the war is over.