It was called the "Destruction of the 2nd Temple". It was also the start of the Diaspora.
None of these. The home of the Hebrews was Israel. After the year 70 CE, when they were kicked out of Israel, The Romans renamed it "Palestine" (but the home of the Hebrews was never called Palestine).
They didn't. They established themselves in Israel. The country was only renamed Palestine by the Romans AFTER the Hebrews were kicked out.Tradition says they established themselves in Israel by Abraham, around 2000 BCE. Later, they return to Israel and had to battle the Canaanites, who moved in after them.Modern scholarship suggests that they actually WERE the Canaanites.
sumin ad because the former palestien was concider the holy land by the inhabitents, so they kicked out the Jews
ejected or kicked out
When you get kicked out of your apartment, it is referred to as being evicted.
Answer 1I am not sure what you mean. Israel was created as a sovereign nation in 1948. Prior to that, Jews were scattered throughout the world, including in what was then called Palestine. History shows that Jews had in fact lived in the middle east for many centuries, and while the creation of Israel was controversial to some people in the Arab world, most of the rest of the world (including the US) decided to support the idea. Since the country of Israel is a sovereign nation, just like other countries, the US cannot "take it away" from anyone.Answer 2It was the Romans who kicked the Jews out of the Land of Israel nearly 2000 years ago, not the United States. The United States has consistently defended Israel's Right to Statehood and became a strong ally of Israel after 1967.
Excommunicated
No, it's called assault.
You are being evicted.
NO. Definitely not. Seriously, I'm not sayin this for fun.
Yyes there is its called yyes
Veni, vidi, vici (I came, I saw, I won).If you're looking for a literal translation: Veni, vidi, culum calce percussi. (The Romans kicked with their heels; calce percussi is "I struck with the heel"). It's not likely, though, that culum calce percussi was ever idiomatically equivalent to the English phrase "I kicked butt".