There were several groups did not share in the prosperity of the 1920s. One of those groups were sharecroppers of the deep South. They were still poverty stricken.
That depends on what you like. As a group you have the camaraderie and the ability to share ideas and come up with things you probably wouldn't come up with yourself. But there is also the possibility of powerplays and jealousies within the group. As a single artist you don't have to share the spotlight, the credit or the glory with anyone. But you have to come up with a backup band if you want anything other than your own guitar, or keyboards or whatever instrument you play. Also on the plus side of being a single is . . . YOU DON'T HAVE TO SHARE THE MONEY!!!
Well the 1920s was called "The Jazz-age". Literature was based on the dramatic events that happened during 1920s . In art , the pictures would express the dramatic event that happened.
Yes, by definition all arthropods are taxonomically related in the sense that they share membership in the same phylum (Arthropoda); although this does not necessarily mean they share a common ancestor.
In the 1920s.
The Spartans ushered in an era of prosperity as Greece's first military and economic superpower.
consumers
consumers
Small Framers.
consumers
farmers
Nova net; True
farmers, new immigrants, blacks, people in poverty, unemployed
everyone
The stock market crash of 1929 put an end to the prosperity of the 1920s in the United States.
The Aristocrats (upper & upper-upper class)
The Great Depression ended the economic prosperity of the 1920s.
The Republicans