civ·i·li·za·tion n. 1. An advanced state of intellectual, cultural, and material development in human society, marked by progress in the arts and sciences,
Civilization is both countable and uncountable. Civilizations is the plural inflection of the noun civilization
Different civilizations have different ideals, beliefs, and attitudes, which may not be compatible with those of other civilizations, so when two civilizations encounter each other in some manner (immigration, war, the internet, etc.) there can be a conflict that results. We can call it a clash of civilizations.
For the same reasons modern civilizations had slaves. To do work and serve the masters
it means poo
Notoriety
Wrong answer.
The origin of the word "school" can be traced back to the ancient Greek word "scholē," which means leisure or discussion. The concept of organized education institutions known as schools has evolved over centuries, with formalized schooling systems emerging in various civilizations throughout history.
The likely word is archaeologists (scientists studying past civilizations).
as a verb, describing word "Back in the days of ancient Rome...." "Ancient artifacts have shown...." "Ancient civilizations lived off of...."
By means of a hand pestle and mortar, or by a hand mill.
bow chica bow wow
In this pre-electronic age, it was the means of communication and recording.
the root word of "civilizations" is _civilize.
The likely word is the plural noun "archaeologists" (scientists who study civilizations of the past).
blending of cultures is not the answer it is political means
The word ruber means red in Latin. The word roseus means rose-red. The word ravus means gray, and the word albus means white.
It was 'borrowed' from Spanish, as many other words such as altiplano, zocalo, conquistador, adobe, machete or salsa.The original word came from the ancient Mesoamerican civilizations located in Mexico: (Aztec: xocolatl - pronounced shocolatl), (Maya: chocolha). It means 'bitter water'.