True. English troops came to Australia and New Zealand secondary schools and asked the students if they wanted to go on a holiday overseas, to have a gun to shoot Germans. school at that time was boring so most kids said 'oh yeah! im in'. the English troops got together and talked, 'so, we have our army, lets war!'
No, that is a false stereotype and is not true at all.
Initially, it was a day of remembrance for those ANZACs who lost their lives at Gallipoli, but it has long since become a day of remembrance for all ANZACs who died in all wars.
true
False
False. The Articles failed precisely because the system lacked a strong central government.
false
False. Not all laws made by a government are considered valid. Laws must adhere to the constitution and legal principles to be considered valid and enforceable. Additionally, laws that violate basic human rights or are unconstitutional can be challenged and overturned.
tRUE
Yes. If all the question's parts are true, then the answer is true. If all the question's parts are false, then the answer is false. If one of the question's parts is false and the rest true, then the answer is false. Logically, this is illustrated below using: A = True, B = True, C = True, D = False, E = False, F = False A and B and C = True D and E and F = False A and B and D = False If you add NOT, it's a bit more complicated. A and NOT(D) = True and True = True NOT(D) and D = True and False = False NOT(A) and NOT(B) = False and False = False Using OR adds another layer of complexity. A OR NOT(E) = True OR True = True NOT(D) OR D = True OR False = False NOT(A) OR NOT(B) = False OR False = False Logic is easy once you understand the rules.
True. All squares are rectangles, but not all rectangles are squares.
true
It is true.
Dictionary meaning's are all true they are not false.
True
FALSE
The military is made of all volunteers.
true