A "Formal Amendment" is one that actually adds to or changes the US Constitution. It is ratified by the states and becomes law.
<span>An "informal amendment"is a change to the meaning or interpretation of the Constitution of the United States. There is no real informal way to change the Constitution, and it's not an actual change to the wording of the Constitution; rather, it's the way we perceive the Constitution that changes. </span>
<span>The one that comes to mind is the equal rights amendment (1972) - which prohibits the inequality of men and women. Opponents say that the amendment is no longer needed, as the issues are already law</span>
Answer:
8. Barter Economy
Explanation:
Barter means exchange goods for services.
Today the easily recognized image of the flapper symbolizes the 1920s<span> for many people. The flapper—with her short skirts, short hair, noticeable makeup, and fun-loving attitude—represented a </span>new<span> freedom for </span>women<span>. ... However, the average </span>woman<span> did wear the fashions made popular by flappers.</span>
Answer:
I didn't make a drawing, but download a blank map of North America, and then used Microsoft Paint to color the areas that those three european continentes had explored by the time.
Explanation:
Spain: Had explored Mexico, Cuba, The Florida Peninsula, and more or less southern half of the Western United States, including modern day California, Southern Nevada, Airzona, New Mexico and Texas.
France: French fur traders where great early explorers in North America. They mostly settled in Quebec, alongside the Saint Lawrence River, and explored sorrounding region. They also explored the Midwest, following the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers, from the Great Lakes, to New Orleans, a city which the French founded.
England: the english settlers and explorers mostly concentrated on the Eastern United States and modern-day Ontario.
The United States claimed the Lusitania carried an innocent cargo, and therefore the torpedoing was a monstrous German atrocity. Actually, the Lusitania was heavily armed: it carried 1,248 cases of 3 inch shells, 4,927 boxes of cartridges (1,000 rounds in each box), and 2,000 more cases of small arms ammunition. The British and American governments lied about the cargo.