Peasant Wars of the Twentieth Century has 328 pages.
Peasant Wars of the Twentieth Century was created in 1969.
the habit of twentieth century
WWII, Korean War, then Vietnam War
Yes, according to historians.
Yes, it released the Star Wars films.
Because it was the one that had both world wars.
Eric Robert Wolf has written: 'Peasant wars of the twentieth century' -- subject(s): History, Modern, Modern History, Peasant uprisings 'Sons of the shaking earth' -- subject(s): Civilization, Indians of Mexico, Indians of Central America, Guatemala 'The human condition in Latin America' -- subject(s): Social conditions, Politics and government, Economic conditions
After the internal wars and expansion of the 19th century, US industrialism peaked during World War 2 and expanded to become the dominant economic force in the world.
The Twentieth Century wasn't just about wars, there were great achievements as well. The Wright brothers made the first flight, Einstein's theory of relativity ...
WWII, Korean War, then Vietnam War
The Wars has 226 pages.
Let's work this out together:The world has seen many wars, but the two world wars in the twentieth century have been particularly devastating.Now, break it down: You have two clauses here joined by a conjunction. (1) The world has seen many wars... (2) ...the two wars in the twentieth century have been particularly devastating. And, the conjunction "but." (I added the comma above for grammatical accuracy.)There is no prepositional phrase in the first clause; you have a simple subject, predicate, object construction.The second clause contains the prepositional phrase. Easiest way to find it is to identify the part of speech of each word:There are eleven:thetwowarsinthetwentiethcenturyhavebeenparticularlydevastatingThere are two definite articles, both "the." So cross off #'s 1 and 5. Number 2, "two," is an adjective here modifying the noun after it "wars," so check off #'s 2 and 3. Number 4, "in" is a preposition...Oh! there's your first hint: prepositional phrases begin with a preposition. A prepositional phrase is a phrase consisting of a preposition, its object, which is usually a noun or a pronoun, and any modifiers of the object. So, we need to look for those components. Typically, the prepositional phrase follows immediately after the preposition. Here we have "in the twentieth century. We know that "in" is the preposition, "the twentieth century" then becomes the object, "the" and "twentieth' modifying "century."Let's keep looking though: "have," modal verb; "been," past tense verb, form of to be; "particularly," adjective, modifies "devastating;" "devastating," adjective, modifies "wars."So, there you have it. The prepositional phrase and a way to find it.