It was an easily portable means of exchange, and also a durable means of storing assets.
You get money and you have a job.
one you know where you money is. two you have sole control over your money
Ranger Frisch coined these two terms in 1933.
The proper noun Athens is the name of a city. It would not ordinarily use a plural. It might be possible to describe Athens (Greece) and Athens (Georgia) as "two Athenses" or simply as the "two Athens."
Some advantages are:Your money is not idle and earns an interest for youThe interest earned in a CD is much higher than the interest you will earn in your savings or checking accountYou can withdraw your money anytime you want
im pretty sure Sparta did but i don't know about Athens i know people in Athens could vote but i remember looking it up and Athens did still have kings take it from me the ATHENS GEEK!
In Athens. == == On the Acropolis in Athens, funded by filched money from the Delian League Treasury
Hopefully we can make it to Athens before sunrise. Athens is the capital of Greece.
If you only have two kids, you will have enough time to spend one on one time with them. You also will have more money.
advantages: you can make much more money with two heads and then you can kill him off to double up. disadvantages: if you take to long to kill him he'll kill you first
Citizens directed the business of the state, and the council implemented it. They also ran the law courts - no judges and crooked lawyers to distort justice. The disadvantage was that persuasive orators could sway the assembly of citizens into unwise actions. Athens thus got into and lost the Peloponnesian War.
He told them that Athens and its empire was stronger than the Peloponnesian League. While Athens had plenty of money from its empire, the Peloponnesians had no such east money to finance a war; the Athenian navy was stronger - the Peloponnesians were farmers, not sailors; that Athens' fortifications were impregnable to land attack; and Athens' fleet was capable of invading the Peloponnesian cities while the home city was safe. With this balance of power in Athens' favour, he told them to reject the Spartan ultimatum to lift the Athenian sanctions on Megara and accept war. Neither side foresaw more than a dispute to be resolved by a battle or two, not the devastating 27-year war which ensued.