Want this question answered?
A constitution is, generally, a written document that outlines the most-basic decisions a people have made about how they should be governed. Sometimes, as in Great Britian, the constitution is not a single, written document, but instead a series of laws and traditions that are accepted as being the basis of the government. Government is the collection of institutions that act out the decisions of the people. A constitution describes a government. A government implements a constitution.
The Articles of Confederation
nothing
Religion was the basis for government as well as private life.
Simple Answer: the US Constitution Long Answer: A whole host of other documents dealing with the structure of government from which the founding fathers constructed their own version. i.e. the Magna Carta, John Locke's works etc.
The Mayflower Compact was a document signed by 41 male Pilgrims on November 21, 1620. By signing this document, the men agreed to form a temporary government and be bound by its laws. The compact became the basis of government in the Plymouth Colony.
Federalism is a system of government in which a written constitution divides the powers of government on a territorial basis
Julius Laffal has written: 'Contextual similarities as basis for inference' 'A source document in schizophrenia' -- subject(s): Case studies, Language, Schizophrenics
A strangely worded question, but if I'm not misunderstanding you: A "contract".
When a legal document says on an exceptions basis it means just that. There are certain exceptions to their rules and laws based on the individual.
the constitution.
The Mayflower Compact: the men on the ship drafted an agreement of just and equal rights, which later became the basis of the American constituion.