<span> . . a <em>tenet</em> is . .<u><em> a main principle/belief, usually religious or philosophical</em></u></span>
. . thus . . main principle/belief of the New Jersey Plan was . . <u><em>to offer the idea of a single-house legislature in which each state would have an equal number of votes</em></u> . . giving smaller states an equivalent voice of power within the government compared to larger states
<u>The correct answer is: he went from Arkansas post to Fort Smith in 1818</u>. His first contact with the frontier occurred during a mineralogical journey through Arkansas in 1817 and 1818. Schoolcraft is known for its discovery of the source of the Mississippi River. He was a geographer, ethnologist and geologist.
In Southwest Asia, WWI forced the Ottoman Empire to disperse and lose all of its land but Turkey, who modernized shortly after. Republics were formed and different people took over, mainly men with military positions.
Thomas Paine (1737–1809) was a radical writer who emigrated from England to America in 1774. Just two years later, early in 1776, Paine published Common Sense, a hugely influential pamphlet that convinced many American colonists that the time had finally come to break away from British rule. In Common Sense, Paine made a persuasive and passionate argument to the colonists that the cause of independence was just and urgent. The first prominent pamphleteer to advocate a complete break with England, Paine successfully convinced a great many Americans who'd previously thought of themselves as loyal, if disgruntled, subjects of the king.
Answer:
The Trail of Death gave Equa-Ke-Sec a strength and survival instinct she didn't have before.
Explanation:
Although you did not present the text to which this question refers, we can consider, in the context of the question, that you are referring to "The Long March" written by Peggy King Anderson.
In this story, Equa-Ke-Sec is a Native American child of the Potawatomi tribe, who was forced to walk for long days from his homeland to the West because of the ambition of the American settlers to possess the sacred lands of the Potawatomi. The trip was extremely tiring, violent and with few resources. Many people died and others became seriously ill, including Equa-Ke-Sec, but she resisted and survived. This difficult episode of her life, was full of difficulty, but it gave a great strength and an instinct to survive unbeatable that she passed on to her daughters, who passed on to her granddaughters and so on.