Curiosity, amassing riches, gaining more land, escaping your present life.
The prime reason was the need for spice. Spice used to come from India, and was transported over land to the west. When the Ottomans seized control of the middle east, they made the transport caravans pay a huge fee for passing trough, which in turn increased the cost of spice. So eventually the Spanish and Portugese decided to go around Africa with ships, and buy the spice cheap in India. Columbus believed that if you sail to the west you will reach India faster, but he ended up discovering the Carribean. He thought that it was India, so sometimes the natives of America are called Indians.
People write about things that have happened in so that in later years we may learn from our mistakes. People that fail to learn from the past are doomed to repeat it.
knelt
past
Yes world history from the past to the present on the local, national, and global spheres is interrelated.
Because they would explore more.
They would explore objects of people and places of the past.
The past tense of "explore" would be "explored".
The past tense of "explore" would be "explored".
"Motivated" is the past tense of the verb "motivate"
The past tense is motivated.
The past participle of "explore" is "explored."
Both are 'explored'.
Motivated is the past tense of the verb, to motivate. Motivated is the past participle of the verb " to motivate" and can be used as a Participial Adjective. Example: A motivated student can learn anything they wish to learn. (here "motivated" describes the student) So, yes! Motivated is an adjective AND the past tense form of the verb "to motivate."
No, it is a noun. An explorer is a person.
Glenn's Children were what motivated him the most. He also credits AA. But he truly credits God for how he has overcome his past.
No. Motivated is a past tense verb, also used as an adjective. The closest adverb form is "motivationally" (in a way designed to motivate).