under God.
Yes, the pledge of allegiance is still in schools. In a lot of schools across America, children and young adults are saying the pledge of allegiance. Some are not allowing the phrase "under God" in the pledge, for not everyone believes in God, and it is only respectful.
Who claims authorship of the "Christian Pledge of Allegiance"? No
Ireland does not have a pledge of allegiance.
Pledge of Allegiance was created in 1892.
I pledge of allegiance to the
I say Pledge of allegiance first
In the Pledge of Allegiance, you pledge your allegiance to two things: the U.S. flag and the United States (the republic for which the flag stands).
Yes, when referencing the title of the Pledge of Allegiance in a sentence, you should use italics to indicate that it is a title. This helps to differentiate the title from the rest of the text and adhere to proper formatting conventions. For example, "The phrase 'under God' was added to the Pledge of Allegiance in 1954."
There are three commas in the Pledge of Allegiance.
There is no pledge of allegiance in France. We could translate it by "serment d'allégeance"
In actuality, the original phrase is "one nation indivisible", which makes much more sense. When the "under God" was added in the 1950's, it split the phrase apart, which I find ironic.
There is no Australian pledge of Allegiance. Children do not recite any such pledge in school.