Social Studies,
Explanation:
Science
Technology
Engineering
Math
It's about how he learns how to play football because he thinks it would be cool because most of the kids weren't playing soccer they were play football
Answer:
A total of 3,240,948 tons of food was sent from Britain to the soldiers fighting in France and Belgium during the First World War. The British Army employed 300,000 field workers to cook and supply the food. At the beginning of the war British soldiers were given 10 ounces of meat and 8 ounces of vegetables a day. As the size of the army grew and the German blockade became more effective, the army could not maintain these rations and by 1916 this had been cut to 6 ounces of meat a day. Later troops not in the front-line only received meat on nine out of every thirty days. The daily bread ration was also cut in April 1917. The British Army attempted to give the soldiers the 3,574 calories a day that dieticians said they needed. However, others argued that soldiers during wartime need much more than this.
Explanation:
I hope your refering to Mormon Battalion..
Anyway hope this helped!
The answer is A. I say this because comma's are used to show a pause in speech. When you are saying that, you pause before saying lonely, You don't just say it all at once, if you do, it can be misunderstood. Hope i helped. Have a nice day
Answer: The right answer is the D) decorated with a drape of lacy hallmarked silver.
Explanation: Just to elaborate a little on the answer, it can be added that since they are asking for descriptive details that help visualize the specific early Victorian tea set, option A can be discarded, since that set was not representative of Wedgwood's most expensive ceramics. In addition, options B and C should also be discarded, since those are not particularly descriptive details and they do not specifically help visualize the piece. The detail that refers to the specific aspect of the piece—the presence of a drape of lacy hallmarked silver—is, therefore, the one that best helps visualize the artifact.