Answer:
The answer is 50
Explanation:
The production possibilities frontiers measures the amount of output that a company can produce of two competing goods. This means that the company has a fixed amount of resources, and can produce a determined quantity of each of the two goods, but producing more of good x means that less resources will be available to produce more of good y.
In this example, we can suppose that for every two custom bouquets that the flower shop produces, it produces one potted plant.
If by day 3, the flower shop can produce 100 custom bouquets, then the amount of potted plants that they are able to produce is 50.
Confucianism is a Chinese system of beliefs (you could argue it's a religion, but it's more a system of beliefs and philosophy) based on respecting the elders and up-keeping the hierarchical structure of the society.
The correct answer is D!
<span>They both agreed to stop communism where ever they may find it.
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The Inquisition was created in the Middle Ages (13th century) and was directed by the Roman Catholic Church. It was made up of courts that judged all those considered a threat to the doctrines (set of laws) of this institution. All suspects were persecuted and tried, and those who were convicted served sentences ranging from temporary or life imprisonment to death at the stake, where the convicts were burned alive in the public square.
The Society of Jesus was founded by Saint Ignatius of Loyola in the Counter-Reformation in the year 1534. He, together with a group of students from the University of Paris, made vows of obedience to the doctrine of the Catholic Church and was recognized by papal bull in 1540.
They soon spread to Portugal, having been requested by D. J. III as missionaries, and acquired great influence in the social environment, between the 16th and 17th centuries. The Jesuits, as they were called the members of the Society of Jesus, were dedicated to missionary and educational work, being mostly educators or confessors of the kings of the time, one of them was D. Sebastião de Portugal.