I don't speak spanish sorry
Answer:
Because they serve as the major importer of foreign goods, and readily available markets for local goods.
Explanation:
European trading companies which were very common around the fifteenth century going forward such as the British East India Company, the Hudson's Bay Company, the Dutch East India Company, and the Dutch West India Company, became an inevitable part of the politics and economy of South India” and other regions of Asia in the period 1450–1750 "Because they serve as the major importer of foreign goods, and readily available markets for local goods."
Through trade, taxes, and other tariffs, they were a major source of money for the different empires in these regions, thereby becoming an inevitable part of the politics and economy of south India.
Answer:
The detail that best supports the answer to part A is:
“The Internet has radically changed how news sources communicate with their audience, and it has made it harder to define ‘news media’ exactly.” ( Paragraph 1)
Explanation:
The passage talks about different sources of 'news media'. It can be newspapers or radio or various internet sources which either read or write about the recent events happening across the globe. The passage also says that news media tries to unbiased as much as possible but it is very difficult to decide whether a given information is unbiased or not.
The detail from text which supports this is Option A. It says how internet being so wide these days that it becomes difficult to make out which news from 'news media' is correct and unbiased.
Answer:
The answer is c
Explanation:
In antiquity civilizations used their own language and enforced this language on conquered people. Ancient greeks used greek as their official language. The romans, on the other hand, prefered to use greek. The conquered minority groups had to subordinate themselves to the conquering empire, and adopt the official language, since neither the romans not the greeks were willing to learn other languages. (except for a few counter-examples such as Saint Augustine, who knew Latin, Greek, Hebrew, Punic, amongst others)