A place where one may find one's fortune.
It means that you will have good luck.
Causes of rural urban migrationWhy Immigrate?1. Plentiful and cheap land in the other areas2. Jobs and opportunities3. Religious freedom4. Political freedom5. faminePush and Pull factors:1. Push Factors:Conditions that drive people to leave their homesExamples:Land scarce in home countryPolitical and/or religious persecutionRevolutionsPoverty2. Pull Factors:Conditions that attract people to a new areaExamples:Promise of freedom (religious and political)Hope for a new lifeIndustryJobsLand"Streets paved with gold"
it effects our GDP when sold??
The letters ep mean 'electro-plating'. It's where a piece of jewellery is made from a less valuable metal (silver for example) and then coated in a more expensive metal like gold.
Men in suits, on apple-advertisement adorned horses, jousting on the main streets of cities all around the world.
That's almost it. "City Where the Streets are Paved with Gold". It's based on Revelation 21:21: "The great street of the city was of gold, as pure as transparent glass." So, as you see, the Bible doesn't say, "paved" (or streets either -- it's one street).
Dick Whittington went to London because he believed the streets were paved with gold.
Those who thought that the streets were paved with gold, or that there would be no antisemitism, were disillusioned.
Streets paved with water do not exist. The phrase "streets paved with water" is often used poetically or metaphorically to describe a place where it constantly rains or where water features are prominent.
William Penn
Venice, Italy.
Many of the streets of Rome were alleys as the city was crowded. The main streets were either gravelled of stone-paved.
Rv:21:21: And the twelve gates were twelve pearls; every several gate was of one pearl: and the street of the city was pure gold, as it were transparent glass.
it is smoother than cobblestones.
It made a lot of immigrants think that life in America was easy and that it was so rich that the streets were paved gold.
In Rome, the world's first paved streets were laid out in 170 B.C. The new streets were popular, as they were functional in all types of weather and were easy to keep clean, but they amplified the city's noise level.
William Penn