Answer:
12. Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, the United Kingdom and the United States
Explanation:
The correct answer is option C. Rosie the Riveter was a cultural icon (not an actual person) of World War II, representing the women who worked in factories and shipyards during WWII, many of whom produced munitions and supplies.
Despite having a proper name, Rosie does not represent a single woman, but thousands. At the beginning of the years 40, coinciding with the Second World War, many American men left their jobs to go to the front. The government then began a powerful campaign to persuade women to dealing their place in the factories.
Over the years, a welter of American women have been identified as the model for Rosie, but it's believed that Naomi Parker Fraley, who worked during WWII at the Alameda Naval Air Station, is the real woman that inspired the icon.
D.) Native Americans could no longer trade buffalo or deer meat with the settlers.
*when cattle became popular, our Mexican friends became the first known Cowboys.
Answer and Explanation:
Joana D'ark had a strong belief in her visions, which gave her little psychological stability, but which made her see them as something divine, religious and the fruit of her devotion. This matches the concepts of popular piety established in medieval society. Late medieval spirituality, on the other hand, refers to Joana's position and the ridicule that she went through because of her masculine clothes and her little feminine behaviors.
Southern whites approved of slavery because it kept the colonial economy afloat. For work that white laborers (indentured servants) refused to do, slaves became a substitute. In Georgia, where the labor intensive job of farming rice was refused by white servants, slaves were able to do that work in their place. Slavery is also considered one of the main precedents to slavery, meaning that as black slaves were put down in society, whites (including those who didn’t own slaves) came to think of them as naturally inferior.