east-west west-east north-west and so on
Anyone who had skills that could be sold in the West, like doctors and engineers, were defecting from East Germany to West Germany. (Oh yeah...they forgot to tell you. The East Germans built another "wall" - well, fence - along the border between East and West Germany.) The Soviets told East German dictator Walter Ulbricht to think of a way to stop the defections from happening, and Ulbricht decided to build a wall all the way around West Berlin.
I think people were egar to get away from the East coast and the high population to try there luck in the gold mines, but also to move on and fight for a place on this so-called "great" territory called California, or, in some cases, Oregon
The West responded to the blockade by transporting supplies including food to West Berlin.
No, the word 'west' is a noun, an adjective, and an adverb.Examples:The wind came from the west. (noun)There's a lot of new construction at the west end of the city. (adjective)We drove west. (adverb)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'west' is it.Example: We're studying the old west at the time it was being settled.
Kurdistan in south west Asia
Yes. The Kurds are an overwhelmingly insular community.
Yes, but there are minorities of Shiite Muslim Kurds, Yazidi Kurds, and Baha'i Kurds.
Most Kurds are Muslims, so yes. There are a minority of Kurds who are Yazidi or Zoroastrian which are henotheistic faiths and not strictly monotheistic. There are also Kurds who are Atheists.
I think they are the Shia Sunni and Kurds or possibly Sufi
Arabs are more, kurds are about 17% of Iraq, they are about 4-5 million kurds in Iraq (there are more than 20 million kurds in the world), the kurds grew more and more powerful in Iraq, now the president of Iraq is a kurd.
kurds
Kurds are members of a mainly pastoral Islamic people living in Kurdistan.
Generally, No. Of the overall 35 million Kurds, there are less the 35,000 Christian Kurds, which makes Christians less than 0.1% of the Kurdish population. Understandably, Christian Kurds celebrate Christmas, but Muslim, Jewish, Yazidi, Zoroastrian, and non-religious Kurds do not celebrate Christmas.
There are around 6.5–7.9 million Kurds in Iran and 6.2–6.5 million Kurds in Iraq, so there are more Kurds in Iran. However, as the Iranian population overall is significantly larger, Kurds make up a more significant percentage of the population in Iraq.
No, not all Kurds have been eliminated. Kurds are an ethnic group primarily living in regions including Turkey, Iran, Iraq, and Syria. While they have faced persecution and conflict in the past, there are still millions of Kurds living in these areas and beyond.
Kurds are an ethnic group. While the majority of Kurds are Sunni Muslims, there are significant religious minorities among the Kurds such as Shiite Muslims, Jews, Christians, Baha'i, Yarsan, Yezidi and other religions.