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the answer to this question is... Lem... LEM is the Louisiana Creole word for LOVE
The Louisiana Purchase and the two Missouri compromises are quite different in the most radical sense of the word "different". The Louisiana Purchase in 1803 was a large amount of territory that France had claimed as their own in the colonial days of North America. As Napoleon of France needed funds for his European wars, he offered this immense tract of land for sale to the US. Thomas Jefferson was the US President at the time, and all parties concerned this was a good deal. So the purchase vastly increased US territory without a conflict to do so. The Missouri Compromises of 1820 & 1850 were Congressional acts proposed to keep the number of slave holding States even with the States that had abolished slavery.
A common word around Thibodeaux, Louisiana for a crazy person is "couyon"
"Our lives today, started with the simple writing of the constitution and grew from there."
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Zero. The word "Federal" is not at all used in our Constitution. Simply the framers described "Union". -Bikash
the Louisiana purchase was vital towards the expansion of the US so Jefferson used the elastic clause as justification for his purchase because a president doesn't have the right purchase territory. The elastic clause is pretty much implied powers. However, Jefferson was a man of his word and a man of the Constitution so it was debatable. But in the end his choice led to success for the US so its disregarded now. Source: I did a research paper on it
We have no idea. The only US state that became a state in 1819 was Alabama. It wasn't "purchased", it was part of the Mississippi Territory, which had been claimed by the state of Georgia before being donated to the US government. The state most commonly associated with the word "Purchase" is Louisiana, but a) the Louisiana Purchase occurred in 1804, and b) the state of Louisiana was formed from part of the area involved in the Louisiana Purchase in 1812, both well before 1819, so it seems unlikely that's what you're referring to.
Ratified
The weather on the wedding day was auspicious, with clear skies and a gentle breeze.
Kenner is a city in Louisiana.
Nope No word exists in the US constitution.
the answer to this question is... Lem... LEM is the Louisiana Creole word for LOVE
The word Louisiana has five syllables. The syllables in the word are lou-i-si-a-na.
Where in the Constitution is the word "Purse?"
Yes, one word in Louisiana history with the letter "q" is "Reserve" which refers to a town in St. John the Baptist Parish. Another word with "q" is "Jacques Telesphore Roman", the name of a former governor of Louisiana.
· Denham Springs is a city in Louisiana