If this is an exercise you have to complete, then the fifth word is the most important word in the question.
YOUR own words is what is being looked for.... not someone else's words.
Read the Bill of Rights, and interpret each section in your own words.
10 laws the founding fathers made that people have to follow and enforce in America forever
The Bill of Rights are the first ten amendments in the US Constitution.
The English Bill of Rights resulted from a revolution usually described by this word the glorious.
Bill of Rights maybe? Or some other amendment to the constitution
If this is simply the name Miranda, then you spell it just the same as in English. If you are referring to "Miranda Rights" then you have a problem. The french have no Miranda rights, nor any real equivalent. This means that they don't have a word for it. If this is what you want to convey then you will need to explain it.
The word "liberty" is found in the 5th and 14th amendments. It refers to the right to remain free unless sentenced by due legal process to confinement.
That depends on what you mean by "rights". The word is tossed around quite often without regard to what the founders were trying to actually set up. I would study The Basic Symbolism of the American Political Tradition by Kendall to understand how distorted this type of wording has become.
the bill of rights was established to ensure domestic tranquility
Constitution Constitution bill of rights
the first 10 amendments known as bill of rights, were added in 1791.
That's easy: Rights of Americans.
The English Bill of Rights resulted from a revolution usually described by this word the glorious.
Many of the articles from the VA Dec. would go into the Bill of Rights, some word for word, since George Mason was a co-author of both.
None of them
elementary
It isn't a bill in the sense of a proposed law that hasn't passed yet. At the time the Bill of Rights was enacted, the word "bill" could also mean a declaration or other document (related to the term "handbill").
There isn't really a plural word for elementary. For example if it were elementary school you would make it into elementary schools.
No, the word 'elementary' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun as the most basic and important part of something. Example:I've signed up for some elementary cooking classes.The word 'elementary' is the adjective form of the noun 'element'.
Bill of Rights maybe? Or some other amendment to the constitution