Two car rental companies charge an initial rental fee plus a fee per day. The table shows the total costs of renting a car for x days from Discount Car Rentals. The total cost y (in dollars) of renting a car for x days from Pay Less Rentals is represented by the equation y=55x + 60. Which rental company charges less per day? How many days must you rent a car for the total costs to be the same?​

Answers

Answer 1

The total costs will be the same if you rent a car for 3 days from either company.

How did we arrive at this assertion?

To compare the cost per day between Discount Car Rentals and Pay Less Rentals, we need to find the equation for Discount Car Rentals' total cost. We can see from the table that the initial rental fee is $25, so the equation for the total cost of renting a car for x days is:

y = 25 + 40x

To compare the cost per day between the two companies, we can divide the total cost by the number of days:

Cost per day for Discount Car Rentals = (25 + 40x) / x

Cost per day for Pay Less Rentals = (55x + 60) / x

To find the number of days when the total cost is the same for both companies, we can set the two equations equal to each other and solve for x:

25 + 40x = 55x + 60

15x = 35

x = 2.33

Since we cannot rent a car for a fraction of a day, we round up to the next whole number, which is 3. Therefore, the total costs will be the same if you rent a car for 3 days from either company.

To determine which company charges less per day, we can plug in the value of x = 3 into both equations and compare the results:

Cost per day for Discount Car Rentals = (25 + 40(3)) / 3 = $35

Cost per day for Pay Less Rentals = (55(3) + 60) / 3 = $55

Therefore, Discount Car Rentals charges less per day.

learn more about rentals: https://brainly.com/question/2281972

#SPJ1


Related Questions

Who is Martin Luther King, Jr.

Answers

Answer:  Martin Luther King Jr. was an American Baptist minister and activist who was one of the most prominent leaders in the American civil rights movement from 1955 until his assassination on April 4, 1968. Martin Luther King, Jr. was also a civil rights legend. In the mid-1950s, King led the movement to end segregation and counter prejudice in the United States through the means of peaceful protest.

Answer:

Martin Luther king Jr was a social activist and baptist

minister in the united states' in the 1950s and 60s .

he was the right to vote.

Which statements describe the Whig Party that was created in the 1830s? Check all that apply.

The party thought states should fund their own infrastructure projects.
The party wanted more investment in infrastructure projects.
Members believed that Jackson was abusing his executive power.
Members thought Jackson was getting overrun by powerful states.
The party was organized in response to an economic crisis.
The party was organized in response to the National Bank controversy.

Answers

Answer: The party wanted more investment in infrastructure projects.

Members believed that Jackson was abusing his executive power.

The party was organized in response to the National Bank controversy.

Explanation: Quizlet

Answer:

a , c , f

                :)    :)    :)

How do Milgram’s experiments support situationism?
a. They prove that people are controlled by their environment, not their free will.
b. They reveal that people are less likely to resist if isolated in a situation.
c. They suggest that a person’s personality is influenced by their environment.
d. They showed how people can behave a certain way based on a situation.

Answers

Answer:

D

Explanation:

MILGRIM DID AN EXPERMINENT ON HUMANS ANDJSKSKSKSKAJSJAJ

D, he was doing experiments on people

↓What are three ways that God speaks to us today?↓

What are three ways that God speaks to us today?

Answers

Answer:

Explanation:

1. Words We Hear

The first way God speaks is the one that’s most often associated with hearing his voice: words we hear. While we would all love to hear an ‘audible’ voice, hearing God’s voice speak in this way appears somewhat rare and particularly reserved for those moments when we’re about to step out into the traffic! The word ‘audible’ itself may indeed be a misnomer – according to my doctoral research, most of those who have experienced it, say it would not have been heard by those around them (See Waiting for God to Speak Out Loud? Think Again). Mostly it seems, the Spirit speaks to us inaudibly and internally – with a message that sounds much like our own thoughts – i.e the ‘still small voice’ of Elijah’s experience (1 Kings 19:9-13).

When God speaks in words, he may give us a single phrase or he may use full sentences. He may use a wordplay (eg. Jeremiah 1:11-12) or give us a riddle that calls us to ponder (Numbers 12:8). Often he’ll ask a question to get us thinking (1 Kings 19:9, 2 Chronicles 1:7) and as the conversation continues, he reveals something more significant later on.

2. Pictures We See

The second way God speaks is in pictures that we see. As God said through the prophet Jeremiah; “Which of them has stood in the council of the Lord to see or to hear his word?” (Jeremiah 23:18, italics mine). We hear his message through words, but we see his message through pictures.

At first, this may seem an unusual way to speak, but we need to remember picture language is the most basic of languages. When children first learn to read, we give them a picture book to practise with – not the Oxford Dictionary. Further, imagery is the most expressive way to communicate which is why it is often said that a picture tells a thousand words. Perhaps this is why God communicates in this way so often in the Scriptures, particularly in the Old Testament where dreams and visions comprise ⅓ of the content (Read: Dreams – God’s Favourite Form of Communication).

When God speaks in pictures, his message comes in dreams when we’re sleeping or visions when we’re awake. Sometimes the picture speaks symbolically and requires interpretation (see for example; The Meaning of Vehicles in Dreams). Other times, the scene is more literal.

Sometimes God’s visual messages are full of riddles, poetry and allegorical forms that are not easily interpreted or measurable. These can be compared to the parables of Jesus which use images or scenes to communicate an idea. Walton suggests that the reason word pictures are used by God is to engage the right side of our brains.1 (This idea was touched on in the podcast: Are Women Better at Hearing God’s Voice?)

Communication in picture form is a way of speaking that the Western church often finds difficult to accept. Writers like Dallas Willard2 and Wayne Grudem3 have gone so far to say it is not a valid way to hear God’s voice. The reasons are primarily historical – an unfortunate product of Reformation thinking that downplayed the so-called mystical forms of spiritual experience. In fact, imagery is the most common form of communication in the Scriptures and can be the most powerful and creative way of all (Read Why God Speaks in Dreams and Visions or listen to this podcast as an example).

3. Emotions We Feel

Finally, God’s messages may come packaged as emotions we feel. In other words, we sense what God is saying to us. The emotion of the Holy Spirit is felt physically and this in itself communicates a message.

So the presence of hope may invade us, comforting us and calling us forward (Galatians 5:22-23, 1 Corinthians 14:3). Peace becomes a guide to lead us (Colossians 3:15) and a deep-seated conviction may turn us around (John 16:8). A friend of mine with a ministry in healing often experiences a sense of sadness when she meets someone who the Holy Spirit wants to touch in a profound way.

One of the reasons why dreams can be such powerful communicators is because the emotion we experience in them becomes part of the message. Daniel felt deep anguish when he first experienced his visions (Daniel 10:1-9), John found himself weeping (Revelation 5:4) and Peter was revulsed by what he had seen in his trance (Acts 10:14). Of course on the other hand, feelings of guilt, shame, fear or condemnation are never a part of God’s communiqués to us.

So God speaks to us in words, pictures and emotions. There are other forms too – although these are not as common. In my doctoral studies, I’ve interviewed people who have heard from the Holy Spirit through the senses of taste and smell! God packages his message to us in a myriad of forms. He is a masterful communicator who knows how to get his message across to those who are listening.

Words we see Things we hear and when praying

What were some major downfalls in the political career of James Monroe?
(I'll try my best to give brainliest if 2 people answer!) (First to answer gets brainliest but the answer has to be correct!)

Answers

Answer:

The Panic of 1819

The Missouri Compromise

Answer: opposition

Explanation:

He was mostly opposed that is the major downfall

Slave codes were laws that...

a. defined the status of enslaved persons and the rights of their owners.
b. defined the status of indentured servants and the rights of their employers.
c. stated how many enslaved workers a plantation owner could have.
d. outlined a public education system for enslaved people.

Answers

The correct answer is A. Defined the status of enslaved persons and the rights of their owners.

which answer is right ?

which answer is right ?

Answers

Answer:A.

Explanation:

Answer:

option 1

Explanation:

Will give brainliest! Pic included... History. PLEASE HELP ASAP

Will give brainliest! Pic included... History. PLEASE HELP ASAP

Answers

The Crusades had a very negative long term impact on the Byzantine Empire. Originally meant to help the Byzantine Empire, the Crusades were a contributing factor to its collapse. This greatly weakened the Byzantine Empire and it was eventually defeated by the Ottoman Turks in 1453. this one?

im not rlly sure but i think it should be C (srry if its wrong tho)

PLEASE ANSWER ASAP! IM GIVING ALL MY POINTS

Like any great empire that has come before or after it, the theories surrounding the fall of Rome are many. Since the empire crumbled, all other great empires or nations have been compared to Rome, with many coming up short. For many, understanding the fall of Rome is the key to the survival of our great nation, the United States. For much of this century, the U.S. has been compared to the Roman Empire in about every conceivable way. There are those who say that we are following the same path to destruction as the ancient Romans. So, why did Rome fall? Could their fate have been averted, and if so, would the world be different today? The answer lies in what you think after you have looked at all the facts. Let's examine what we know. We know the great empire known as Rome no longer exists. Now let's look at what we don't know. The following are a number of theories to help get you started thinking about the fall of Rome.
1. Did plagues reduce the population to the point it could not sustain itself?
2. Did civil wars lessen the strength of the empire and weaken the population?
3. Did the army lose its discipline and thus endanger the empire and cause it to be overrun?
4. Did the citizens of Rome become too satisfied and lazy, allowing the empire to crumble due to neglect?
5. Did the empire bureaucracy become too top heavy, eventually causing the empire to collapse upon itself?
6. Did it fall as the result of barbarian invasions?
7. Did the empire spend too much of its resources on the poor, thus drawing away precious funds from the empire?
8. Was the Roman Empire just too big, making a collapse inevitable?
9. What similarities exist between Rome and the United States?

10. Do you feel the United States is in the process of decline as a nation?


11. Assume for the minute that the U.S. is declining in a manner similar to Rome. How would you stop the slide and return the U.S. to its prior greatness?

12. Why did Rome fall? Internal/external conflicts? Explain.

Answers

Answer:

1. Did plagues reduce the population to the point it could not sustain itself?

Plagues did reduce the population, but not to the point it couldn't sustain itself the plague was like a bee sting to the empire. It hurt but it didn't make it fall.

2.Did civil wars lessen the strength of the empire and weaken the population?

In the begging it helped quite a bit, but when men started dying the empire was no longer safe and they were losing strength and the empire was becoming weak.

3. Did the army lose its discipline and thus endanger the empire and cause it to be overrun?

Yes, but instead of being over run it made it easier for the goths and the Heruli to invade the south part of the Balkan Peninsula several times as well as making the Franks and Alemanni feel encouraged to plunder northern Gaul.

4. Did the citizens of Rome become too satisfied and lazy, allowing the empire to crumble due to neglect?

Yes, this was a pretty big issue to rome. The soldiers used to have to pay for the armor in war, but a new rule came upon making the state pay so the poor could fight as well this is only one reason but a pretty important reason it crumbled.

5. Did the empire bureaucracy become too top heavy, eventually causing the empire to collapse upon itself?

Yes, the leaders, emperors, and government all became too heavy headed and took advantage of their powers making the top half collapse.

6. Did it fall as the result of barbarian invasions?

Yes, partially because of them in 200 bce and partially because of other issues.

P.S. I will comment the other questions and answers on this answer.

Hope this helped, GretaVanFleetRocks

35 POINTS PLEASE HELP

Write three sentences from the point of view of an early Chinese aristocrat defending the structure of Chinese society
(please don't forget it has to be 3 sentences or more but try to aim for 3 )

Answers

Answer:  

The aristocrats made up a very small portion of Chinese society and were often well-connected to the emperor. These aristocrats were generally landowners who collected rent from their tenants and, in turn, paid tribute to the emperor as a show of allegiance. The revered Chinese thinker Confucius, who claimed that social structure and rigid orders was important if one wanted a peaceful Kingdom and Happy society.

Explanation:

As an early Chinese aristocrat, I believe that the social structure of our society is necessary for maintaining stability and order. Our system of hierarchy ensures that everyone knows their place and responsibilities, which leads to a harmonious and efficient society.

Without the strict rules and expectations that govern our society, chaos and disorder would ensue. The divisions between the different classes ensure that each group can focus on their specific tasks and contribute to the greater good of the community.

While some may criticize our system as being rigid and hierarchical, it is important to recognize that it has allowed our civilization to flourish and maintain its cultural identity for thousands of years. It is a system that has stood the test of time and should be respected and upheld.


I hope it helps you

As the value of Roman coins decreased people began to ________ again.

Answers

Answer:

Barter

Explanation:

They started barter

What is the dominant religion in Siberia?
0
Catholicism
Islam
Tajiks and Kirghiz
Russian Orthodox

Answers

Russian orthodox Christianity

Russian Orthodox - represents more than half of siberia and they practice it

In a previous unit, you learned that two lines of Hebrew poetry can follow either a synonymous, synthetic, antithetical, emblematic, or climactic form of parallelism.Use your Bible to identify which type of parallel form is used in the following verses of Psalm 22.You may wish to refer to Unit 6,The Psalms, for help with this activity.

Read Psalm 22:1.Identify the type of parallel form that is used.

Emblematic
Antithetical
Synonymous
Synthetic
(Only 1 answer is allowed cause its not multiple choice)

Answers

Answer: \(synthetic\)

Explanation:

Synthetic would be the answer <3

what do you think the interaction between the British colonists and the Indigenous Americans will be like? Connect to a piece of outside evidence to support your thinking.


plzz helpp ill give all credit

Answers

Answer:

Explanation:

I believe that the interaction between the British colonists and the Indigenous Americans were surprisingly peaceful as I believe that both sides were willing to trade with each other and Britain was willing to make them Christian.

HOWEVER, the British always saw them as inferior and believed that they stood in the way of their colonization and forced them to follow British laws and etc.

you can join me now plz join

Which improvement did the Persians make to increase trade in their empire?
A.
tunnels
B.
canals
C.
sail boats
D.
carriages

Answers

Answer:

I think it’s B. Canals

Answer:

b

Explanation:

One particularly ambitious project was digging a canal between the Nile River and the Red Sea

Match each word to the phrase that describes or defines it.
1.
sanatorium
2.
paltry
3.
scrumptious
4.
transgressors
5.
fortify





a.
to make strong or build up
b.
very delicious
c.
those who violate the law
d.
a hospital that treats deadly diseases
e.
ridiculously unimportant

Answers

Sanatorium is a hospital that treats deadly diseases
Paltry is ridiculously unimportant
Scrumptious is very delicious
Transgressors those who violate the law
Fortify is to make strong or build up

Choose any country (or a city within the country) that you have studied in this unit. These include Russia, Poland, The Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Germany, Romania, Bulgaria, Albania, Croatia, Macedonia, Slovenia, and Bosnia-Herezegovina. Using the Internet, an encyclopedia, or other resources, research the period of communism in the chosen country, and write a report in which you describe what life was like for the citizens during the era of communism. Your report should be approximately 300 words in length.

Answers

Answer:

The history of Bosnia has not been easy, it has been conquered by many foreign powers and has become religiously and nationally divided. During the Il World War Bosnia was occupied by Croatia and fell victim to ethnic cleansing and civil war. Part of population joined Croatian forces, other Serbian Chetniks and third communist partisans.

Explanation:

just copy n paste it its long ash

POLAND

Question: What were the living conditions in Poland during the Communist Era like?

Answer:

That's a vast span of time, and the most usual way to split it is into decades. Housing shortages have often been an issue for us (even today affordable housing is problematic).

40's - It is apparent that the country suffered severe human and material damage. The Holocaust was particularly terrible because it targeted Jews as well as Polish elites who were viewed as threats (Whose were best educated group in pre-war Poland). Because of the acute housing crisis, the government sometimes partitioned big flats into a number of smaller ones. The development produced very typical units with shared restrooms because some of those flats were extremely spacious and had numerous rooms. However, nobody seemed to mind because communism certainly had no intention of carrying out a genocide and Poles were in power. Despite being autonomous, we were under Soviet Union's control (this leash was somewhat flexible though). Land reform at the time resolved the enormous problem of "Land Hunger," which existed in pre-war Poland. Even if there were no communists, the post-war administration would nonetheless implement land reform (Polish Underground State planned to do it)

50's - Redevelopment initiatives and the continuance of communist ideological programs to eradicate illiteracy, provide universal health care (which was poor and difficult but better than the majority of the population had none previously), and improve infrastructure (electrification). The first significant strikes had just occurred (like many economical grounds was the cause). A few indications of the communist economic model's drawbacks, such as a variety of shortages, began to appear. For the majority of individuals who are familiar with pre-war times, especially farmers, the situation actually became better as they began to have more money, were able to make purchases, and were able to engage in the economy. Superheterodynes were no longer considered to be a luxury good and the majority of Poles began to utilize thermionic valve radio receivers instead of crystal sets throughout this decade. The invention of television was a costly commodity but a crucial indicator of progress in general.

60's - The majority of people really had money because of shortages, yet despite television becoming more and more widespread, it was still a costly good. New housing construction helped alleviate the housing crisis (I live in apartment block build in this era). Still, it wasn't sufficient.

70's - It was a rather prosperous decade. mostly as a result of substantial loans from western nations. The funds were intended to be utilized to develop an industry. The problem is that because it wasn't done correctly, even while the economy as a whole experienced an increase in affluence, we were unable to earn sufficient income to repay them. No surprise the next decade was bad. While pricey, color television started to become more and more popular.

80's - In this decade, the unrealistic model we used's economic issues became most obvious. Massive shortages started to become the norm, and they started to threaten the communist leadership. Politics didn't generally pique people's interest, but when there were shortages, everyone was impacted, which fueled the Solidarity movement. The United States had placed an economic embargo on us, and the Soviet Union, which was waning, was unable to offer us the necessary economic assistance. We used inexpensive Soviet resources (this was the leash). At that time, we began trading with China, which gave us agricultural products (mainly meat) in exchange for manufactured commodities used in industry.  It wasn't harsh enough, and the economy caused the communist regime to wane. It wasn't a total catastrophe like those in Venezuela, and there were some advancements as computers began to arrive in Poland (8-bit machines usually). Even Nevertheless, the communist leadership fought to maintain its hold on power because they were obviously scared of what would happen to them if they abandoned it. They made a few last-ditch attempts before realizing that economically, we are done. However, it was too late. Since we were interested in punishing only those who were extremely infamous (and their deeds were genuinely unlawful to begin with even under the law at that time) and desired no retaliation, the agreements with Solidarity secured a smooth transfer to power. It goes without saying that this enabled us to convert to a more accurate economic model. In general, living circumstances were better than they had been before the war for the bulk of the people (running water, electricity, literacy, healthcare, free education on all levels).

In one to two sentences, explain how technological advances changed how people lived and worked during the Second Industrial Revolution.(2 points)

Answers

Technological advances during the Second Industrial Revolution brought about significant changes in how people lived and worked.

The introduction of electricity, the expansion of railroads, and the development of machinery revolutionized industries and improved transportation and communication.

These advancements led to the rise of factory systems, mass production, and urbanization. People migrated from rural areas to cities in search of employment opportunities in factories.

The use of machinery increased efficiency and productivity, but also led to concerns about labor conditions and job displacement. Overall, the technological advances of the Second Industrial Revolution transformed societies, reshaping work patterns, urban landscapes, and social dynamics.

learn more about second industrial revolution :

https://brainly.com/question/13221792

It change how people lived by them evoking with the tech changing the way they eat sleep and drink
#keepthelearningflowing

Which of the following stands out in Native American culture compared to the cultures of early river valley civilizations?

Craftsmanship
Agriculture
Polytheism
Tribal governments

Answers

Answer:

I'm going to say Craftsmanship

Explanation:

Answer:I'm going to say Craftsmanship

Explanation:

What was Captain Cook's role in the First Fleet?

Answers

Answer:

Myth 2 – Cook and Endeavour were in the First Fleet and brought convicts to Australia. ... In fact, Cook was the representative of the British Crown and claimed possession of the east coast of Australia on behalf of the Crown, naming it New South Wales

Explanation:

Myth 1 – Cook was the first European to discover Australia
According to a recent survey 31 per cent of Australians think that James Cook was the first European to find Australia.1

The fact is that Cook’s 1770 voyage followed more than a dozen previous encounters by Europeans in the north-west, west and south of the continent throughout the 17th century – all of them more than a hundred years before Cook’s visit. There may even have been earlier Portuguese visits in the 16th century, and some historians have suggested that the Chinese Grand Fleet, under Admiral Zheng He, may have arrived here in the 15th century. Visiting long before Cook, men such as Willem Janszoon, Luis Vaz de Torres, Dirk Hartog, Frederick de Houtman and Abel Tasman are certainly not household names, as are Cook and Endeavour.

Cook can claim a couple of other ‘firsts’, though: in 1770, he was the first European to chart the east coast and the Endeavour crew were the first Europeans known to have landed on the east coast.

In fact, the oldest known foreign visitors to Australia were from modern-day Indonesia and Papua New Guinea. Makassan traders had been visiting and trading with people in northern Australia for hundreds of years and dugout canoes were traded from the Sepik River to the Torres Strait Islands for generations before Cook arrived there.

No European ‘discovered’ Australia. The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander inhabitants of this continent managed that all by themselves – some 60,000 years before any European turned up.

Painting of James Cook
Captain Cook by Nathaniel Dance (1735-1811), published 1969. State Library of Victoria, H32508

Myth 2 – Cook and Endeavour were in the First Fleet and brought convicts to Australia
According to the same survey, 47 per cent of Australians think that Endeavour arrived in Australia with the First Fleet in 1788 – and they are 100 per cent wrong!2

The First Fleet, under Captain Arthur Phillip, arrived in Botany Bay between 18 and 20 January 1788. By that time, Cook had been dead for nine years, Endeavour had been renamed Lord Sandwich, and in 1778, during the American War of Independence, the ship had been scuttled in Newport Harbor, Rhode Island, as an underwater defence against French attack.

The way many non-Indigenous Australians mix up Cook and Phillip is understandable – for many years Cook’s arrival was seen as a better foundational moment than a fleet full of convicts, and so 29 April (the date when Endeavour arrived at Botany Bay in 1770) was officially celebrated as the origin of white settlement. From the 1930s, the focus of national commemorations turned towards the First Fleet – but often didn’t mention the convicts. It wasn’t until the ‘convict stain’ began to be erased in the 1970s that the First Fleet became widely associated with the beginning of modern Australia.

In fact, Cook was the representative of the British Crown and claimed possession of the east coast of Australia on behalf of the Crown, naming it New South Wales. Cook’s arrival has therefore become the symbol of the European invasion and occupation of the continent, particularly for First Nations people.

Myth 3 – January 26 marks Cook’s arrival
Another fallacy. On 29 April 1770, Cook arrived in Stingray Bay (which he later changed to Botanist Bay, then Botany Bay – the area is now the Kamay Botany Bay National Park). January 26 was when the First Fleet arrived in Sydney Cove – 18 years later, in 1788. Governor Phillip moved the planned settlement from Botany Bay to Port Jackson (Sydney Harbour). Strangely, perhaps, the usually meticulous cartographer Cook didn’t even enter what Phillip called ‘the finest harbour in the world’, but merely sailed past.

Myth 4 – Cook circumnavigated Australia
That’s a ‘no’. Cook saw only the east coast of the continent, and was several thousand kilometres short of a circumnavigation.

Cook sighted the mainland near what is now called Point Hicks, in Victoria, and sailed north up the east coast before continuing to Batavia (now Jakarta, Indonesia). He didn’t ever see the north and west coasts of the continent, and the only southern region he encountered was on a later trip, when he sailed Tasmania’s east coast.

The first European to circumnavigate Australia was Matthew Flinders, from 1801 to 1803. Flinders was accompanied by Bungaree, the first Indigenous Australian known to have circumnavigated the continent.


MATCH THEM PLEASE TY

MATCH THEM PLEASE TY

Answers

Answer:

Explanation:

1: 2

2: 5

3:7

4:1

5:8

6:3

7:10

8:9

10:4

Answer: 3. brasilia

Explanation:

Why is this portrait of Pocahontas important to the study of the early colonies in North America?

A:It was painted by a famous artist.
B:it is valuable to art collectors and museums.
C:It is a rare record of dress in the English colonies.
D:it is a rare portrait of an important woman in history.
E:It documents the relationship between early English settlers and Native Americans.
2 ANSWER"S PLEASE!!! :>

Answers

Answer:

D

Explanation:

She helped English settlers Louis and Clark and for that she is an important part of our early American history

I think it’s B and D only bc they make the most sense.

Who owned all the land and industry in Russia after the Soviet Union Collapsed.

Please give a proper answer or I will report you. Thank you!

Answers

Answer:

In the USSR, all levels of government were controlled by the Communist Party, and the party’s politburo, with its increasingly powerful general secretary, effectively ruled the country. Soviet industry was owned and managed by the state, and agricultural land was divided into state-run collective farms.

Explanation:

i hope i helped

In which century was the telescope invented ? a. eighteenth b. seventeenth c. sixteenth​

Answers

The answer is (C) Sixteenth century
the sixteenth century

What topic, issue, or subject matter will you be working on? Be specific. [Hint: you can go back to the earlier instruction for topics or even interest groups that may interest you.] For Government and Economics!

Answers

Answer: I am Working on Government then I shall be graduating High school this month ^^

Explanation:

i need this for the answers thanks buddy idrk

Why didn't the United States establish a Direct Democracy?

Answers

There are too many people to make voting directly on every law practical.

The United States is a representative democracy. This means that our government is elected by citizens. Here, citizens vote for their government officials. These officials represent the citizens' ideas and concerns in government.

In the South after the Civil War, which of the following enforced segregation in public accommodations?
A) property taxes
B) Jim Crow laws
C) county unit rules
D) grandfather clauses

Answers

B) jim crow laws i’m pretty sure

Answer:

B) Jim Crow laws

Explanation:

The first steps toward official segregation came in the form of “Black Codes.” These were laws passed throughout the South starting around 1865, that dictated most aspects of Black peoples’ lives, including where they could work and live. The codes also ensured Black people’s availability for cheap labor after slavery was abolished. Segregation soon became an official policy enforced by a series of Southern laws. Through so-called Jim Crow laws (named after a derogatory term for Black people), legislators segregated everything from schools to residential areas to public parks to theaters to pools to cemeteries, asylums, jails, and residential homes. There were separate waiting rooms for white people and Black people in professional offices and, in 1915, Oklahoma became the first state to even segregate public phone booths.

how was ww2 a result of appeasement?

Answers

Answer:

Spurred by voters who demanded "No more war", the leaders of Britain, France, and the United states tried to avoid conflict through diplomacy. ... This resulted in weak western governments and this allowed Hitler and other countries to take advantage and cause war.

World War II result of appeasement because it gave Adolf Hitler the power to do as he pleases with his expanded military forces.

World War II

Appeasement is a foreign policy of calming an unhappy country via negotiation to prevent war.

Britain's policy toward Fascists and Nazis in the 1930s was part of appeasement.

Appeasement encouraged Hitler to be more forceful and invade neighbouring countries.

With more land, Germany became protected, with more troops, raw materials, weapons and industries.

Learn more about World War II here:

brainly.com/question/11378857

Music: Madison can you help with this, is the second one

Music: Madison can you help with this, is the second one

Answers

Answer:

heyy i got it!

Explanation:

9. face

10. fa

11. bee

12. be

Yea what she said ^^^^^^^^^^

If an officeholder is impeached are they removed from office immediately? Why or why not?​

Answers

Answer:

The process to impeach and remove an individual from office involves two stages, under the constitution there is no right to a jury for an impeachment

No, because it take time for the steps as there are to steps from impeachement
Other Questions
Btw the the first few people that answers in 3 mins correctly will get A Brainiest badgeThe article recommends you heavily consider your expected starting salary after graduation. Why do you think this is an important factor to keep in mind when making a decision? Which Beaker wil the magnesium strop react with the HC1(aq) the fastes? h(t) = 450 + 50 sIn (t - 5) /20Suppose the performance starts at t = 0 seconds. At what times will the drone's altitude reach 500 feet duringthe first minute of the show? Listed below are the 35 members of the Metro Toledo Automobile Dealers Association. We would like to estimate the mean revenue from dealer service departments. The members are identified by numbering them 00 through 34. 3/5 intoconvert to decimal What is the range of f/x )= A x? Which of these is a difference between the Senate and the house? the Senate allows unlimited discussion of bills, the house has stricter rules, The house is elected by the people and the Senate is selected by state legislatures, the house bases promotion strictly by seniority, the Senate does not, Which propaganda technique is being used in the following statement? My opponent is much younger than me I, and has not learned to be responsible enough to do this job. Help please!!!!! ill give brainliest Assume that a positive integer cannot have 0 as its leading digit. (a) How many five-digit positive integers have no repeated digits at all evaluate the line integral, where c is the given curve. c x sin(y) ds, c is the line segment from (0, 2) to (4, 5) can you plz answer plz!? I4 What happens to a believer who dies? Contrast this with the Roman Catholic teaching of purgatory lester has high test anxiety, which tends to affect his test performance even though he studies a lot. according to the yerkes-dodson law, which of th In context, the question in line 5 (Why write ever the same) conveys the speakers L sold to S wheat by sample. The wheat was contained in 2parcels and S was given the opportunity of comparing the bulk ofonly one parcel with the sample. S refused to accept the deliveryof goods. Can he be held liable for the breach of contract? Mind and hands are the treasure to serve others Does Natal mean birthday? according to the appraisal process, appraisal dimensions are responsible for evoking emotions. joy is associated with what appraisal dimensions? PLEASE HELP ME QUICK DUDES!!