that Jefferson wanted it to have the government and the people to have equal power and IT IS NOT CANDY
Infer
inductive
Reasoning is using facts to come to a conclusion
The Federalist Party, founded in the early 1790s, was the first political party in the United States, advocating for a strong national government and a loose interpretation of the Constitution. Key figures included Alexander Hamilton and John Adams, who promoted policies like a national bank and tariffs to support industrial growth. The party was influential in the late 18th and early 19th centuries but declined after the War of 1812, largely due to opposition to the war and its perceived elitism. Ultimately, the Federalist Party dissolved by the 1820s, paving the way for the Democratic-Republican Party's dominance.
Jefferson Davis was the President of The Confederate States of America; Jefferson Davis married the Great- Great Granddaughter of George Washington, who was also Zachary Taylor's daughter; Additional facts are: 1. Jefferson Davis graduated from West Point and served in the US army. 2. He served in the Mexican War; 3. He was a senator from Mississippi before the Civil War; 4. He was the Secretary of War for the US; 5. He was a wealthy slave owner in Mississippi.
that Jefferson wanted it to have the government and the people to have equal power and IT IS NOT CANDY
someone else should awnser this qouestion
"Jumping to a conclusion" is not knowing all the facts and forming a conclusion. Drawing a conclusion is learning all the facts to make a conclusion if it is correct or not.
conclusion
one can be considered a pseudoscience if it did not undergone the scientific process. For example, making a conclusion before gathering facts that would support it.
Infer
A conclusion is the idea or information you have, once you have all the facts.
A thesis statement is a conclusion that you have reached, based on facts (and possibly based on hypotheses as well); it is not just a statement of facts. Facts are stated in order to support your conclusion.
inductive
inductive
A basis for a conclusion is the evidence, facts, or reasoning that supports the conclusion being drawn. It is the foundation upon which the conclusion is built and is used to demonstrate the validity and soundness of the conclusion.
The fact that they did live near the Nile suggests very strongly that that is where they wanted to live.