A good compromise for the Proclamation of 1763 that can satisfy the King and the colonists is to make a better proclamation and/or trade to get bigger lands, like barter trading.
I think the compromise of 1850 was a good solution because slavery is just wrong.
That would be the Connecticut Compromise
Good
APEX....*The Great Compromise*<3
if your mother gives an effort to settle a compromise it would be to do your freaking homework and open a book
The opposite of a compromise would be a failure to compromise, possibly a stalemate (remaining in disagreement or unsettled).The opposite of the verb to compromise would be to not compromise, to be stubborn, adamant, or inflexible.
An offer in compromise allows a person to settle their debts for less than the amount they owe. A good time to pursue this would be when you owe debts of a substantial amount.
no
no
I think the compromise of 1850 was a good solution because slavery is just wrong.
That would be the Connecticut Compromise
I think it was the 3/5th compromise
good thing
Examples with the word "compromise" and other variants: "You've comprised the mission." "Don't compromise the plan." "What we've done was a compromise between the two of us." "We need to learn how to compromise." "He won't compromise his morals." "Despite her hatred of him, she agreed to compromise." "The oversight caused a compromise of the machine."
Without compromise the states would not have come into agreement, especially about representation.
I will compromise my learning by asking others to do my homework for me.
Compromise can be used as a noun or a verb. Noun: The compromise that the two came to agree upon was logical. Verb: He would not compromise his beliefs to fit in.