Wiki User
∙ 12y agoIt's either five, six, seven, or ten.
Wiki User
∙ 12y agoAdding to or changing the Constitution It is called "amending" it. There are currently 27 ratified amendments to the US Constitution.
1791
The bill of rights (first 10 amendments) were part of the constitution when it was ratified
The first ten amendments were presented and ratified with the Constitution. The Constitution would probably not have been ratified without the rights guaranteed to the states and people in these amendments, which are called the Bill of Rights.
There have been many amendments proposed for the Constitution. However to date only 27 of them have been ratified. A Wikipedia article estimates the total to be around 11,372 for the period 1789 through 2008. Of those that were never ratified, six received the required two-thirds majority votes of both houses of Congress.
It's either five, six, seven, or ten.
only 27 of the 31 amendments proposed have been ratified
Amendments to the constitution must be ratified by the states. To become part of the Constitution the Amendment must be approved by three-fourths of the states.
Your question is very confused. Amendments are ratified, they do not ratify.
there are currently 27 ratified amendments
26. The 27th Amendment, proposed in 1789, was not ratified completely until 1992, almost 203 years later.
Adding to or changing the Constitution It is called "amending" it. There are currently 27 ratified amendments to the US Constitution.
The United States Constitution was written in 1787 and ratified in 1788. It has 27 amendments, but the first 10 were ratified simultaneously in 1791 so it was amended one time with ten amendments. The other 17 amendments were ratified one at a time. So the US Constitution has 27 amendments but has been amended 18 times.
It details how amendments are proposed and ratified.
The Bill of Rights (first 10 amendments) were part of the constitution when it was ratified
It details how amendments are proposed and ratified.
It details how amendments are proposed and ratified.