1955
True
Freed former slaves received the right to vote.
The British did not recognize the right of people to become naturalized citizens of a country that they had not been born in. Thus, the British considered any naturalized American citizen, who had been born in Great Britain, not to be an American citizen but a subject of the British Crown. Since conscription was the norm in Britain for all male subjects of the Crown, any subject of the Crown found on the high seas was subject to conscription. In other words, if you were born in Britain, you were subject to the British military draft, no matter where on earth the British Government found you or what country you called home.
White men. With the passage of the 13, 14 th amendments the right to vote was given to former male slaves, but they really weren't able to use this right until the 1960's with the civil rights movement. Women didn't get the right to vote until 1920 and the passage of the 19th amendment.
citizen
Because that's what feels right to them. Science is still in the process of explaining it, and most studies of homosexuality have been on male subjects.
no, male pandas are called boar. here is a website supporting my answer: http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/mammals/panda/
True
Slaves were never allowed to vote. Male African-Americans or persons of color were given the right to vote in 1870.
Matthias is an example of a male given name with German origin.
yes it is true they relate more to male teachers
The Baron is the lowest male in the British peerage.
In British Slang, a "woof" is a male homosexual.
Yes the mk1 male and female were British tanks built by the British infentry divisions the were first used during the Somme offensive during September 1916
The meaning of the word "persons" was not made particularly clear by the legislators of the British North America Act. The Supreme Court of Canada concluded that the word could be interpreted to include only male subjects in the context of the Act; however, this interpretation was overturned by the Judicial Committee of Her Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council (which, at the time, was Canada's highest judicial authority), concluding that female subjects were also "persons".
Bruce Dickinson
A Gander