you can use resources to figure it out I use Plato to and it can be vague so it took digging to find the answer
Internet: Websites should be from credible web addresses ending in .edu (an educational institution), .gov (government agency), or .org (non-profit). Any web pages that end in .com (commercial) or .net (networks) should be reviewed with caution.
Books, newspapers, and magazines: Examine the author’s qualifications. He or she should be educated in the field of nutrition/dietetics, and preferably hold a degree from an accredited university (RD, DTR, LD, or MD). These individuals should also belong to a credible nutrition organization.
Television: Make sure that the findings are well researched and repeatable; one study doesn’t make a finding absolute. Be critical and look for follow up studies.
For all media sources: Make sure the information is referenced with cited sources. Seek out multiple perspectives regarding nutrition advice, and ask a nutrition expert about the source of the findings. Ensure that the information is current and informing, not attempting to advertise or sell a product.
<span>Actually any government for that matter will raise money in the form of indirect taxes levied on all their citizens or people unnecessarily as they want to show their brutal position powers, ie, which means the government will find all the legal and some illegal ways, where they can mint or raise big money as much as possible, of which only a small amount is used back for the peoples wellbeing, which is very sad part on the people.</span>
Answer:
The traits essential to new life on the frontier included both pragmatism and individualism.
Explanation:
In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, waves of Americans left the coast to explore the frontier land out west. In order to be successful in the Western lands, Americans had to often learn to survive the wilderness in foreign terrains and climate(s). Two ideals were central to this new lifestyle: individualism, or the idea of competition for resources between individuals rather than big businesses; and pragmatism, a philosophy of being practical about wants and/or needs while focused on the end goal, using science/logic/reason for knowledge, using words and thoughts for problem solving, and a focus on a changing universe (of successful [outdoors-man] living).
Answer:
Cuneiform was used as a form of record-keeping and it was picked up by the speakers of different languages. This helped to perpetuate it across different cultures. Today it is largely preserved on stone tablets whereas other exemplars of early languages were kept on more perishable materials like leather or papyrus.
Explanation:
Cuneiform was a language that many societies in the Ancient Near East had in common. The cuneiform style was so dominant that scholars have said that it is the script for the first half of recorded history. Even to this day, cuneiform tablets survive in great abundance. The cuneiform script was not in itself a language. Scribes from different cultures could decipher and use it to convey information in a number of languages and not just ancient Sumerian. Among them is the Semitic language Akkadian which was the lingua franca of the Assyrian Empire and for the Babylonians. The Rosetta Stone equivalent for cuneiform is Bisitun Pass in Iran. There there are inscriptions recorded in Persian, Akkadian, and an Iranian language known as Elamite. This allowed researchers to decipher repetitive words across the different languages like “Darius” and “king” and so they could eventually piece together the information that cuneiform conveyed.