Article V or 5
The purpose of the 7 articles is to regulate how the government is run. It tells the powers of all government branches and the states. It also tells talks about ratification, amendments, etc. Here is what each article tells about. This will help you with the u.s. Constitution project. Article 1- Legislative Department Article 2- Executive Department Article 3- Judicial Department Article 4- Relations Among States Article 5- Amendments Article 6- National Debt, Supremacy, and Oath Article 7- Ratification
he tells them to make stories, and whoever gives the best stories gets a prize
one
the part of the constitution that explains how the legislative branch should work is article one.
The first known gallows was in 1873 and was first used to hang prisoners. There is a newspaper article that still exists that tells the public about the making of the gallows and what its intentions were.
3/4 of state legislatures :D
The word ratify means "to pass, or approve".So, you're essentially asking which article of the constitution tells us how to approve the constitution and make it law.I think what you mean is "What article tells us how to amend the constitution." To amend the constitution means to somehow change it, which has only happened 27 times.Article #5 tells us how to amend the constitution.
Article VII of the US Constitution addresses this: "The ratification of the conventions of nine states, shall be sufficient for the establishment of this Constitution between the states so ratifying the same."
article v important because it tells
The purpose of the 7 articles is to regulate how the government is run. It tells the powers of all government branches and the states. It also tells talks about ratification, amendments, etc. Here is what each article tells about. This will help you with the u.s. Constitution project. Article 1- Legislative Department Article 2- Executive Department Article 3- Judicial Department Article 4- Relations Among States Article 5- Amendments Article 6- National Debt, Supremacy, and Oath Article 7- Ratification
article 4
article 1
Article one
Article v
Amendments to the US Constitution are ratified by the states, and by the states alone. The federal government itself does not have a say at all. Amendments don't come along that often, and a lot of people don't realize this. What fewer people realize is that amendments can originate in the states as well; they do not have to be originally offered by the federal government. This method is in the Constitution but has not ever been implemented. If the states initiate an amendment, the federal government only tells the states what method will be used to ratify-- either by state legislatures, or by state conventions gathered for this purpose.
Article one
Article 4 of the U.S. Constitution tells what the states can do. This article also provides a clear guideline as to the rights and responsibilities of the federal government as well.