During the <u>Middle Kingdom</u> ( 2255-1650 B.C.E ) the Pharaohs began to work for the welfare of people. The whole Egypt was reunited under one rule and the period of Middle Kingdom is being called as golden age of Egypt because of economic, political and social stability of the period. Trade, arts and literature flourished during this period. The Pharaoh in the Middle Kingdom used to be "shepherd of his people" charged with the task of building public works and producing for the welfare of the Egyptians.
The correct answer is:
A. Women wore shorter skirts and hairstyles and gained more independence.
Explanation:
The 1920s, also known as the roaring twenties or the Jazz Age, was the era after World War I, where American prosperity was achieved. After World War I, women in the United States gained their right to vote, and wanted to be treated like men, they started wearing shorter skirts and short hairstyles that reflected their new freedom, women also changed in the way they behaved, they started working, going out to party, drinking and smoking and had no care for morals,<em> this type of women were called Flappers.</em>
The person who has been known up until today as the "father of modern economics" is Adam Smith. A thinker and philosopher from Scotland, born in 1723 and died in 1790, Adam Smith was given this important title because of his ideas and theories on laissez-fair and the tendency of free markets to regulate themselves by way of competition, supply, demand and self-interest. He wrote several books where he proposed his economic ideas, among which we have: The Theory of Moral Sentiments, where he expresses this ideal of a hidden hand, which means the capacity of markets to autoregulate and An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. He was also the proponent of the theory of compensating wage differentials, which states that jobs that are riskier pay much better wages to workers because of the risk they represent, versus jobs that offer little to no risk. He is also known as the father of Capitalism.
Pollution, litter, and cars