No. Apartheid was a practice of racial segregation- a noun. It does not show actions of a person.
After apartheid, Nelson Mandela became president of South Africa.
Apartheid separated the people of South Africa.
a rigid policy of segregation of a nonwhite population.
The world regarded apartheid as a nefarious policy.
The world regarded apartheid as a nefarious policy.
They were usually given death sentence.
No, it is written in the active voice. Here is the sentence refigured in the passive voice:Although Mandela was locked away, the anti-apartheid laws continued to be influenced by him.Although technically correct, it is not a very pleasing sentence.
I would say apartheids, as in "the apartheids of South Africa and India." In this case, if the word "apartheid" was used, it would sound (to me, at least) like South Africa and India had gotten together and created a joint apartheid program.
Apartheid was a system of racial segregation enforced by the national party of south Africa between 1948 and 1994, under which the rights of majority black inhabitants werecurtailed and minority ruel by whites was maintained.
A sentence to say in one sentence is to say a sentence in one sentence! It is quite easy to say a sentence in one sentence if that is all you have to say. "The cat with brown hair, hair of brown has the cat" is a sentence to say in one sentence. To say in one sentence the reasons behind the onset of World War Two does not do the subject any justice at all.
Apartheid
The apartheid era was a turbulent time in South Africa's history.