Social Studies, 05.03.2020 07:01 aruhter9485
Read the passage. (1) Alfred I ruled England for nearly 20 years. (2) He ruled from A. D. 871 to 899. (3) He is known as Alfred the Great. (4) He deserves that title. (5) Alfred firmly believed in the importance of education. (6) He showed that belief by building schools. (7) He also invited scholars to his court. (8) Alfred had the scholars translate books from Latin into Anglo Saxon, the common language of his subjects. (9) In fact, Alfred himself translated some important works. (10) He was well versed in Latin. (11) He had studied it. Which is the most effective way to combine sentences 1 and 2
Answers: 1
Social Studies, 22.06.2019 03:30
Which at first gave the south an edge in the civil war? a. a better-equipped army b. the invention of ironclad ships c. the drafting of slaves into the army
Answers: 1
Social Studies, 22.06.2019 10:20
According to the belmont report, the moral requirement that there be fair outcomes in the selection of research subjects, expresses the principle of: a. beneficence.b. respect for persons.c. justice.
Answers: 1
Social Studies, 22.06.2019 14:00
Countries that are neither core nations nor peripheral nations
Answers: 1
Social Studies, 22.06.2019 15:00
Which of the following selections is least useful for supporting the claim that states intentionally built unequal school systems? question 1 options: the supreme court ruling in plessy v. ferguson (1896) wrote into law that america had two separate societies: one black and one white. it was very clear by the mid-1900s that southern states had expertly built separate educational systems. these schools, however, were never equal. states with laws keeping schools segregated never gave equal amounts of money to their black and white schools. ten years after brown, fewer than 10 percent of southern public schools had integrated. some areas did not comply at all.
Answers: 2
Read the passage. (1) Alfred I ruled England for nearly 20 years. (2) He ruled from A. D. 871 to 899...
SAT, 07.04.2022 22:20
Mathematics, 07.04.2022 22:20
Mathematics, 07.04.2022 22:20
Social Studies, 07.04.2022 22:30
Law, 07.04.2022 23:30
English, 07.04.2022 23:30
Mathematics, 07.04.2022 23:50
Mathematics, 08.04.2022 01:00