Want this question answered?
No, the Gettysburg Address did not directly address women's right to vote. It was a speech delivered by Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War, focusing on preserving the Union and honoring the soldiers who had died in battle. Women would not gain the right to vote in the United States until the passage of the 19th Amendment in 1920.
crossing the middle passage
Interesting and very difficult to put into x amount of letters.
He was looking for a passage to India (for the trade route for spices, etc) that would negate the requirement to navigate the Cape of Good Hope (South Africa) which was a notoriously difficult passage.
The rites of passage is when you change your social status
Where is the following passage?
Please provide the passage you would like paraphrased.
That is a quote from The Gettysburg Address,not from the Bible.
Please provide the passage you would like paraphrased from the poem Beowulf.
No, the Gettysburg Address did not directly address women's right to vote. It was a speech delivered by Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War, focusing on preserving the Union and honoring the soldiers who had died in battle. Women would not gain the right to vote in the United States until the passage of the 19th Amendment in 1920.
The men admired Jurgis for what he knew about animals. (A+)
paraphrase
he was getting accustom to his new life
Paraphrasing is the act of rewording or restating someone else's ideas or information in your own words, while maintaining the original meaning. It is a way to express information in a clearer or more concise manner without directly quoting the original source.
restate information in a new way while preserving the original meaning.
To paraphrase expresses a meaning of something, either written or spoken, using different words, to clarify an original statement. To put something into one's own words without loosing the meaning
Remember the people who sacrificed their lives at Gettysburg