l don't know - sorry
Rebecca DeKalb
Iron Curtain
The Iron Curtain.
He said an "iron curtain" has descended across the continent.
The phrase "It was used by the Roman Gladiators" does not describe the city of Teotihuacan.
Prime Minister Churchill of Great Britain used the phrase that the Axis powers would "Bleed and Burn in expiation of their crimes against humanity."
Reign of Terror.
'Iron Curtain' was a figure of speech used by Winston Churchill to describe the effect of Russian expansion and domination of Eastern Europe immediately after WWII. Stalin worked on posession being nine-tenths of the law, and the other Allies were in no mood to engage in another military confrontation. Consequently, many nations seeking liberation from tyrannical German occupation got tyrannical Russian Communist occupation instead. Churchill announced that 'an Iron Curtain has descended across Europe.', and the phrase stuck.
Winston Churchill
Winston Churchill first coined the term "Iron Curtain" in his 'Sinews of Peace' address to Westminster College in Fulton , Missouri . ~ See related link below to further information regarding the Iron Curtain .
He said an "iron curtain" has descended across the continent.
the British wartime prime minister Winston Churchill
Bleeding Kansas
a phrase is 3or 4 words in a sentence that describe something.
Notably, Churchill recognized the rise and threat of the Soviet Union, and popularized the phrase "Iron Curtain".
Coined by Sir Winston Churchill in an address to Westminster College, March 1946. He stated that 'an Iron Curtain had descended across Europe.....we are all subject in one form or another, not only to Soviet influence but to increasing measures of control from Moscow'
Winston Churchill coined this phrase
A prepositional phrase consists of a preposition, its object, and any modifiers that describe the object. The preposition in the phrase indicates the relationship between the object and the rest of the sentence.
A fraction is a division expression where both dividend and divisor are integers.
Winston Churchill, though he was repeating the phrase used earlier by Joseph Goebbels in 1945.