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In world war 1 the central powers were Germany, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman empire. The allies where The British empire, France, Russia and later the United states, Italy and 21 other nations
My mom
It was not in the central powers
The Central Powers and the Allied Powers
Germany and Austria-Hungary were the main two chunks of the Central Powers. -Sakura K.
Each of the Central Powers nations had a border with another nation of the Central Powers. This made transport of supplies and communication easier.
The central powers was a group of nations that were neither democratic nor communist but dictatorships.
allied powers got more
In World War I, the Central Powers were Germany, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman empire. They were joined by Bulgaria in 1915. Italy refused to go to war despite the Triple Alliance, and later joined the Allies (the Entente Powers led by Great Britain, France, and Russia).
Italy was a member of the Tripl Alliance, which formed into the main nations of the Central Powers when war broke out. It joined the war on the Allied Side.
They were either part of the Allied Powers or they were Neutral
In World War I, the Central Powers consisted of four nations roughly occupying the central portion of Europe and the northern Middle East. From north to south, the nations were Imperial Germany, the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Bulgaria, and the Ottoman Empire.
The question is incomplete. There are no options given (for "which of the following") to answer this question.
british blockades
In world war 1 the central powers were Germany, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman empire. Italy was part of that alliance but because it switched sides before the name changed from the triple alliance to the central powers it is generally not considered a central power.
The Central Powers (Germany, Austria/Hungary, Bulgaria, and the Ottoman Empire) lost World War One; against the Allied powers (the British Empire, US, Belgium, France, Japan, Montenegro & others).
Austria-Hungary and Germany