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I had take that test!! and I know that the answer is C)agricultural in both north and south.
Russia was the leader of the world's fur trade for centuries. After the discovery of North America, the fur trade was very profitable for both the United States and Canada.
'Dearness' is the English word for 'mehangai'.
English is the universal language of business.
In English pounds, it's about £7. NO JOKE (if you didn't believe that)!
Possible answers:inkEnglish, Early Modern English to be preciseiambic pentametera room in London, Englanddoublet and hosethe sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
Thomas Graves Law has written: 'The archpriest controversy' -- subject(s): Clergy, Catholic Church, Jesuits 'A calendar of the English martyrs of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries' -- subject(s): Catholics, Martyrs
The Native American groups known to English language-speakers as Arapaho, Crow, Lahota, and Shoshone are the first known settlers of what is now Wyoming. The first known European settlers were Spanish-speakers in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, French-speakers in the eighteenth century, and English-speakers by the early nineteenth century.
Edmund David Jones has written: 'English critical essays (nineteenth century)' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Criticism, English essays, English poetry, History and criticism, Poetry 'English critical essays' -- subject(s): Criticism, English essays, English poetry, History and criticism, Poetry 'English critical essays (sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries) selectedand ed. by Edmund D. Jones' -- subject(s): Criticism, English essays, English poetry, History and criticism, Poetry
This saying comes from the play The Mourning Bride, by William Congreve, an English author of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries.
People of African descent, brought to Florida and Louisiana during the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries, learned to speak Spanish or French rather than English, and they became Roman Catholics rather than Protestants. In addition, the routes to freedom were more plentiful in the Spanish and French colonies than they were in Britain's plantation colonies.
If by "the original days of theatre" you mean England in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, they thought it was indecent for women to appear onstage. There were actresses in France but the English thought it was disgraceful. If you are talking about even older theatre, in the middle ages, Roman and Greek periods, the attitude was pretty much the same, and the records indicate that there were no actresses then either, notwithstanding the profusion of excellent female parts in the plays.
the sixteenth letter of the English alphabet, a consonant.
Arnold Dolmetsch has written: 'The Interpretation of the Music of the 17th & 18th Centuries' 'Select French songs from the 12th to the 18th century' -- subject(s): French Songs 'The Interpretation of the Music of the 17th and 18th Centuries' 'Selected English Songs and Dialogs of the 16th and 17th Centuries (Reprint 1898)' 'The interpretation of the music of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth centuries' -- subject(s): Embellishment (Music), Interpretation (Phrasing, dynamics, etc.), Music, Performance
Before William Shakespeare started writing, there were no standardized grammar rules for English as it was constantly absorbing new words and modifiers from wars, exploration, and colonization. Over the course of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, ShakespeareÕs plays introduced new words and phrases as well as offer many quotes for dictionaries of the English language.
The English empire expanded into America in the mid seventeenth century by making permanent colonies. The first colony was in Virginia. They then moved to the Caribbean and other parts of North America.
they were very boring they didn't want decorations in their church