Yes, certainly. You've got one big division between the Catholics and the Protestants. On the Catholic side there's the division between the Roman church and Eastern Orthodox. On the Protestant side there is a large number of denominations, from big sects like Episcopalian, Baptist, Methodist, and so on down to tiny groups hardly anyone has heard of. And some of those groups have splitoffs within them. You have your Quakers, Shakers, and Pentecostals, and you have your Presbyterians, Congregationalists, and Nazarenes. You even have your Unitarians. The list goes on. As the saying goes, many rivers to the sea.
Because some christians ,like catholics believe in Jesus and Mary and all his saints, but some like,pentecosts believe in Jesus only and have more restrictions like covering head with scarf
Christianity subgroups--Orthodox, Catholic, Protestant Judaism subgroups--Orthodox, Conservative, Reform Islam--Sunni, Shiite Buddhism--Mahayana, Theravada There are myriad subgroups of these subgroups and more than I've listed here--please add on--
yes
what are the five vegetable subgroups
Denomination and sect are both words which are used to describe smaller groups within a larger religious grouping. "Denomination" is used exclusively for sub-groups of Christianity, especially Protestant Christianity. "Sect" is used more for smaller and less mainstream groups, and for subgroups in non-Christian religions. "Branch" could also be used to describe a subgroup of a religion, but is perhaps more appropriate as a term for a group of subgroups. With respect to Christianity, for example, the Lutheran Church is a denomination, but is only one of a number of denominations which come under the umbrella term "Protestant". For this reason, "Protestant" might be described as a "branch" of Christianity.
Yes. The group {0,1} has precisely 4 subgroups.
The subgroups of monera are heterotrophic and autotrophic. Heterotrophic are basically the types of bacteria, meanwhile autotrophic is a type of blue-green algae.
hi members, i have been faced with the same question. but this was my idea. to answer this question, we should ask ourselves the following quetions. * what are the subgroups of cases? * what can you learn from calculating summary statistics seperately for subgroups of cases? * how can you graph summary statistics for subgroups? with these questions answered then you have answered the whole question. H. IKOBA
Yes
the mulluska and poripera
18
Carbon
Core cliques are cohesive subgroups. The subgroups consist of a small amount of people who interact with each other but exclude others not in the clique.