The number of senator from the state+ the amount of other electors according to the state's population that is all I know
The answer is B. The Tokugawa shogunate keep Japan isolated from 1603 until 1853 to keep foreigners from tampering with Japan's affairs. <span>But Japan wasn't totally isolated - they still kept up trade with Holland, China, and the Ryukyu Kingdom - just extremely tightly controlled.</span>
Day 1:
Today, I went to school. I woke up when the rooster awoke me, and I first did all my chores. Afterwards, I had breakfast and walked to school. The teacher made us copy some words on our slates, and spell them out loud. Everyone did really well. For lunch, I went to the river with my friends. The teacher did not assign homework, and we got to go home early.
Day 2:
Today my chores were more difficult, because we are beginning to get ready for winter. At school, the teacher made us memorize some poems, and I was asked to help the smaller children with the words they did not know. I also stayed after school to help the teacher clean the classroom.
Day 3:
Today was Friday, which meant that we would study science. Therefore, we went to the river, and we looked at the fish and the other animals that lived there. The teacher then sat us on a circle in the forest and she talked to us about how all nature is connected. We then had lunch and came back to the classroom. Once in class, we wrote a paragraph about winter, and then we went home.
Answer:
It made city-states ununited, since they formed independently from each other. City-States were constantly fighting and going to war with each other.
Explanation:
Since city-states had distance between them, they adopted different lifestyles from one another; their economies depended on different recourses because their terrain was different from one another (ex: states by the coast would often fish as a main source of income and food). The mountanous terrain of Greece only separated city-states further and encouraged the independent growth of city-states. This meant Greece was ununited and city-states would constantly go to war with each other.