Answer:
A. The French and Dutch relied heavily on trade alliances with Native Americans, while the Spanish did not.
Explanation:
In the paragraph it follows that Samuel de Champlain who was a French explorer, talks about his contact with the Algonquians in a positive and friendly way. He speaks of friendship, of joint coexistence and of trade in techniques as well as providing settlers with part of what the natives hunt in exchange for goods that the French can give in return to the natives.
This differs from the approach of the Spaniards who, although they initially traded small quantities of objects such as mirrors for gold ornaments, focused solely on the exploitation and use of natives for their own gains, forced conversion and slavery.
This process is called irrigation, and it is claimed that irrigation was developed there (and it was also developed in China independently around the same time).
In Mesopotamia people used an irrigation of canals: they had built a number of small channels that diverted the water from the rivers towards the fields.
In Egypt, the water of flooding was stored and re-introduced at a later time to prolong the "flooding" period.
(Egypt and Mesopotamia were two regions in the Fertile Crescent)
Answer:
Abstract is the correct answer.
Explanation:
Answer:
- Billie Eilish, <u>who's</u> <em>(who has) </em>had several hit songs recently, is one of my favorite singers.
- Danielle, <u>who's </u><em>(who has)</em> lived in Australia for the past two years, just moved back to the U.S.
- Jack doesn't know <u>whose</u> number that is.
<em>number of whom. it belongs to someone obviously.</em>
- My cousin Mike, <u>who's</u> <em>(who is) </em>one of the funniest people I know, is coming to visit next week.
- I don't know <u>whose</u> receipt it is, but this lasagna is delicious!
<em>The receipt is "of whom". It must be belonging to someone, and they don't know who that someone is.</em>
- My mom asked, "<u>Whose</u> dirty shoes are on the kitchen floor?"
<em>dirty shoes "of whom". shoes belong to someone</em>
- Regina, <u>who's</u> <em>(who has) </em>finally recovered from her cold, invited Ariadne to sleep over on Friday.
Explanation:
- who's stands for who has or who is.
- "whose" is associated with someone or something, <em>as in of whom/ which.</em>
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- who's speak of living things, like a person who is funny or who has a resort.
- whose associates itself with non-living things(MOSTLY! The sentence can also be <em>He's the person whose opinion I respect the most.</em>), or we can say it associates itself with the belongings or characteristics of a living being.
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