By a vote of two-thirds of Congress and three-fourths of the states
Nope :)
By amendment
Another Amendment. Amendments may be changed only by a later amendment. If a particular amendment needs to be changed, it is not changed the way a law would be amended by deleting or adding wording. Amendments are changed by adoption of a later amendment that states that the prior amendment is changed in a certain way.
Yes, through the amendment process.
The process of changing or adding to the US Constitution.
An amendment is a change to the constitution so no once they have been enacted they have not changed.
It can be changed by the three ideas of Flexibility: The Elastic Clause, The Amendment Process, and Judicial Interpretation.
The US Constitution is changed by adding amendments, as explained in article V of the Constitution.
If you mean the US constitution, then yes, by amendment. But it's important to note that the US constitution is quite unusual in that an amendment doesn't mean a change, just an extra bit of text added to the end.
When the Bill of Rights were amended into the constitution
What is written can and has been changed. The 18th amendment, for example, which prohibited the manufacture or sale of ethyl alcohol for entertainment, was repealed.
The Thirteenth Amendment to the US Constitution was adopted on December 6, 1865. It is the Amendment that abolished slavery and involuntary servitude.