Hey there!
"Which word or phrase describes the native people of Mongolia in the 12th century?"
Well... we could do process of elimination
- It can't be "hunter-gatherers" because they are the members of the nomadic people that who live "chiefly" but by hunting or fishing for certain foods (like wild foods
- It can't be farms because it just doesn't have to do with this portion
- It CAN BE nomadic herdsmen they are basically people who were part of the tribe a particular group that constantly moved from each place to place with/without a indefinite house
- It can't be city-dwellers because they were people who lived in the cities
So, therefore your answer would be: 
Good luck on your assignment and enjoy your day!
~
Answer: i think it was called atmospheric steam engine
Answer:
all citizens should be treated equal by law
The correct answer is A) They had differing ideas about a powerful national government.
After the Revolutionary War, states were consistently worried about the power of the national (central) government. Considering that one of the biggest reasons for breaking away from England was a tyrannical central government, helps to understand why there were differing ideas about the structure of the American govenrment when the US became independent.
This is why the United States, under the Articles of Confederation, had a small and weak central government. Some states liked this while other states felt that this central govenrment was too weak to function effectively.
It did not bring to an end the tremendous injustices that African Americans had to suffer on a day-to-day basis, and some of its activities, such as the work of the Federal Housing Administration, served to build rather than break down the walls of segregation that separated black from white in Jim Crow America. Yet as Mary McLeod Bethune once noted, the Roosevelt era represented “the first time in their history” that African Americans felt that they could communicate their grievances to their government with the “expectancy of sympathetic understanding and interpretation.” Indeed, it was during the New Deal, that the silent, invisible hand of racism was fully exposed as a national issue; as a problem that at the very least needed to be recognized; as something the county could no longer pretend did not exist.