The correct answer is letter A.
Explanation: South Africa has the second largest economy in Africa. In the sectors of economy the main are manufacturing, wholesale and retail trade, transport, mining, agriculture, financial services and of course tourism.
Kenya has one of the fastest growing economies in Africa, their growth is by encouraging trade, small business, developing sectors of energy and agriculture. Agriculture is the main reason of economic growth.
Answer:
<h2>I don't no because I'm connected to brainly Philippines</h2>
Answer:
it led to the creation of unified monarchy
Explanation:
Mainstreaming occurs in this particular
circumstance. What mainstreaming means is, according to Stanley Baran and Dennis Davis
authors of the book “Mass Communication Theory: Foundations, Ferment, and
Future”, that television symbols make the main source of information and influence
the most the person's view of the outside world. It makes person align more with
what TV says than maybe what is actually, objectively true. This can be
explained with the question similar to this one: Are economic austerity
measures failing? We may think they are because someone on the TV is forcing
that they are even if they are actually succeeding. That is why it is important
to critically think and look at real, objective data and for television to be
unbiased and objective as much as it can.
Answer:
Later that year, Anne gave birth to a baby girl, <u>Elizabeth I.</u>
Explanation:
Henry VIII's desire to have a male heir was because of the necessity to found someone who could succeed him on the throne. When he married Catherine of Aragon, he wanted a son, but she didn't give it to him. That's the main reason Henry VIII decided to be divorced, and once the Catholic Church didn't allow him to do, he created his Church. What succeded after that is a huge number of marriages, all of them unsuccessfully to give him a son. Anne Boleyn, like the other wives, couldn't offer a boy to the King, and he accused her of witchcraft and incest, leading her to death in 1536.