Answer: The correct answer is : Term deposit
Explanation: It is a fixed-term investment where money must be deposited in an account in a financial institution. These investments usually have a short term maturity, where they can go from one month to a few years. The investor can only withdraw his funds after the end of the term.
Romanticism: an artistic and literary movement in the late 18th century that highlighted inspiration and the primacy of an individual
Jethro Tull: (I'm guessing you are not looking for the definition of the band) so it is the inventor who invented the seed drill in 1700.
Eli Whitney: an inventor in the 1800s who invented the cotton gin with the intention of reducing slavery. Instead, slavery was increased
Utopia: a perfect society
Socialism: the political idea that the community as a whole should benefit from the economic profit (as in the wealth should be spread throughout the whole community)
Bessemer Process: a process used to make steel in which impure metals are removed from iron to make steel
Louis Pasteur: the scientist who is most famous for his invention of pasteurization, which made dairy safer to consume.
Adam Smith: a Scottish economist most well known for his book "An Inquiry Into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations"
Karl Marx: the political theorist who came up with the idea of communism
Capitalism: an economic/political system where the country's industry/trade is controlled not by the government, but by private entities
Nation-State: a state whose citizens are fairly similar in culture, language, and common descent
Popular Sovereignty: the consent of the people creates and sustains the ruling government.
Congress of Vienna: a meeting held from November 1814 to June 1815 that resolved ties after the Napoleonic Wars and the French Revolutionary Wars.
Otto von Bismarck: a Prussian statesman who was prominent in government from the 1860s to 1890.
Pogrom: the persecution of a religious or ethnic group (most commonly associated with the persecution of Jews in Eastern Europe.
Serfs: a laborer that farms on his lord's estate (in the feudal system)
Hope this helped.
Q.1 What were feedom riders?
The Freedom Rides of 1961 was a revolutionary movement where black and white people refused to sit in their designated areas of buses to protest segregation. Blacks sat in the front of the bus and whites sat in the back, opposite of the usual arrangements. There were multiple different rides from several different locations and a variety of people. At every stop, the freedom riders would use the opposite segregated facilities such as bathrooms, restaurants, and water fountains
Q.2.where and when?
They began in Washington DC on May 4, 1961 and went to New Orleans originally. But the rides sparked a revolution and inspired many other people from several states to take part in the freedom rides and support the fight for racial justice.
Q.3who was involved?
The idea was conceived by The Congress of Racial Equality and the first ride involved 7 blacks and 6 whites who boarded the bus in Washington D.C. Many Freedom Riders were trained Civil Rights Activists who practiced peaceful protest and lead with bravery. Some were even involved in the diner sit in's the year before.
Q.4.why?
They intended to test the Supreme Court's ruling in Boynton v. Virginia (1960), which declared segregation in interstate bus and rail stations unconstitutional but was failing to be enforced.
Boynton vs Virginia was a court case about a man named Bruce Boynton who was in a restaurant within a "white only" bus terminal and refused to leave. He was arrested for trespassing, but the offense was turned over by the Supreme Court because "white only" and "black only" areas were deemed unconstitutional through Brown v. Board of Education (1954).
This was also the next step towards anti-segregation that promoted the ideas brought on by diner sit in's that took place in the previous year.
The Freedom Rides also had the goal of gaining not only public attention but also the attention of the Kennedy Association in order to raise awareness of the rising Civil Rights Movement.