Answer:
I can't attach files, but I hope my explanation about the details can help you.
Explanation:
In every famous literary work, there are usually details that contribute to the magic of it. In the case of Peter Pan, an infallible and fantastic story, it is about a child who never grows up because he doesn't like the world of adults. Details such as personal (fairies, pirates, children and how each behaves) the magic dust of Campanita that makes Peter Pan fly and thus move between the real world and the Neverland, lost children, etc. They are the ones that help complement the story.
Answer:
The Soviet Union built the notorious Berlin wall in 1948 primarily to stop the residents of East Germany from fleeing to the Western part of Germany, which had, by then, merged the three territories held by France, Britain and the United States.Explanation:
There are currently 24 women in the Senate.
This poster refers to a victory garden. Victory gardens were homemade gardens planted by American citizens during World War I and World War II. The goal was to use fruits and vegetables from these gardens to ensure that there is enough food for soldiers overseas. The expectation was that whoever planted these victory gardens would contribute their harvest to the war effort.
In this poster then, the intended message is that anyone who grows a victory garden is having a direct, positive effect on the military. This is evident from the soldier in the background stating that " I see were fighting the war together."
Probably the earliest problems between them were regional. In the later period of the Divided Monarchy (Israel and Judea) one of the strongest enemies of the Israelite monarchies was the Kingdom of Aram, which was a Secondary Power just as the Israelite monarchies were. (The Primary Powers were Egypt and the Mesopotamian Kingdoms - Assyria and Babylon.) The Bible records the story of Naaman, an Aramean general, who is healed by the Prophet Elisha. While the Biblical story does not mean that this actually happened, the way that the King of Israel reacts to Naaman's peaceful entry into Israel reflects the enmity between the Israelite monarchies and the Arameans. Most of their disputes were territorial and dealt with the areas in the eastern Galilee and the Quneitra region. These territorial disputes were directly related to the amount of power that each could exert over smaller regional allies such as the Phoenician States in Lebanon or the transjordanian kingdoms.