Answer:
You would have been living with family based on the feudal system of samurai or in England with your father working on lands for you lord in turn fro protection and safety.
You would also help find and make food with your mother.
You would not go to school.
You would become another serf of the land.
Otherwise, you can go find a job as a blacksmith or other jobs.
Otherwise, you can get training as a knight and fight for the lords and receive land as a reward.
1. The right is if the government is making you do unjust things and abuse their power u have the right to say no
2. Yes, the whiskey rebellion, rebellion against the townshed acts
3. They both rebelled against the government for making laws they didn’t approve of, they stop buying the products and protest
It was a big family, they lived with their parents, uncles and aunts, cousins, brothers and sisters, grandparents, and more. In rich family, they lived together in a big house. But most of Chinese people were poor, so they lived in <span>separate one-room cottages. The cottages were within easy walking distance from one another. </span>
The presidency of George Washington began on April 30, 1789, when Washington was inaugurated as the first President of the United States, and ended on March 4, 1797. Washington took office after the 1788–89 presidential election, the nation's first quadrennial presidential election, in which he was elected unanimously. Washington was re-elected unanimously in the 1792 presidential election, and chose to retire after two terms. He was succeeded by his vice president, John Adams of the Federalist Party.
Washington had established his preeminence among the new nation's Founding Fathers through his service as Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War and as President of the 1787 Constitutional Convention. Once the Constitution was approved, it was widely expected that Washington would become the first President of the United States, despite his own desire to retire from public life. In his first inaugural address, Washington expressed both his reluctance to accept the presidency and his inexperience with the duties of civil administration, but he proved an able leader.