During the Roman Republic all the five types ofofficersof state had the power of veto.Officersof state of the same rank could veto each other's actions andofficersof state of higher rank could veto the actions ofofficersof state of lower rank. It was the actions not the decisions which were vetoed, and therefore, stopped.
In the Roman Republic the officers of state had the power to veto, which was used to block the actions of officers of state of equal or lower rank. The plebeian tribunes also had the power to veto and could use it to block the actions of any officer of state when they deemed such action to be harmful to the interests of the plebeians.
You could not veto a law, but you could block the action of submitting a bill to the senate for advice or proposing it to a popular assembly for voting when the action was about to be carried out.
The veto had to be served on the person who was to be vetoed. Before the plebeian tribunes became the main proposers of legislation, they were the ones who vetoed the action of proposing a bill more often. They put a table by the entrance of the senate house and sat there, waiting for the person to be vetoed, and then served it. The vetoer made his intention public before executing it. The person who was target of the veto could seek the withdrawal of the veto or ask the senate for a vote of blame on a person who opposed a measure which was for the public good.
This practice was, among other things, connected to the fact that the Roman Republic did not have a centralised government or cabinet/administration. All officers of state were elected and operated independently within the remit of their office.
Early ancient Greek phalanxes had the distinctive tendency to drift to the right side on a battlefield as they advanced. The reason for this was that the soldiers carried their large shields on the left arm because it safeguarded his comrades unshielded right side. This was not planned however, each soldier unconsciously moved toward his right side.
state
The gladiators of ancient Rome fought large exotic animals and each other.
they played with each other
They were different becuase each class did something different
the conculs had the right to veto others decisions
The consuls. Here's a brief description on them. The consuls served for only a year (to prevent corruption) and could only rule when they agreed, because each consul could veto the others decision.
Each others backs. And that's not all they did on each others backs!
You would need to talk that out between yourselves, and not worry what others think. You will come to the right decision in the end.
In a direct democracy, each citizen has the right to vote on every decision and issue.
Ancient Greece was a collection of city-states known as the polis. They were controlled by a city council at the behest of the people. Some of the polises were true democracies where everyone voted on each decision.
you had the right to one apple, and one glass of milk each day. thats it.
in Paris they shake hads and kiss 4 times: one on the right, left right left
Through peer review
In a democracy, each minority group has the right to equal treatment, protection of their rights, and representation in decision-making processes. This ensures that minority voices are heard and respected in the governance of the country.
If they have sole legal custody- yes. If the parents have joint legal custody- each has a right to take part in that decision.If they have sole legal custody- yes. If the parents have joint legal custody- each has a right to take part in that decision.If they have sole legal custody- yes. If the parents have joint legal custody- each has a right to take part in that decision.If they have sole legal custody- yes. If the parents have joint legal custody- each has a right to take part in that decision.
when you guys are looking in each others eyes. theres never really a right time. it just happens -jennifer