The group of amendments to the United States Constitution is commonly referred to as the Bill of Rights. Ratified in 1791, it comprises the first ten amendments, which guarantee essential rights and liberties such as freedom of speech, religion, and the right to bear arms. Subsequent amendments beyond the Bill of Rights address various issues, including civil rights and voting rights.
The thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth amendments are called the reconstruction amendments
Changes or additions to the Constitution are called Amendments.
Specific changes to the Constitution are called amendments. There are 27 amendments; the first 10 are called the Bill of Rights.
The 4th, 5th, 6th, and 8th amendments.
Changes to the Constitution are called Amendments.
All of the Amendments protect the rights of the citizens from being infringed upon by the Federal Government. None of the Amendments were designed to benefit any one "class" or geared toward any specific group of people except for that group called US citizens. Ours is system that gives liberties to all equally.
27 amendments divided into three groups gives you 9 amendments per group.
It's actually the first 10 amendments and they're called the Bill of Rights.
They are the Amendments. There are currently 27 Amendments to the US Constitution. The first 10 of which are called the Bill of Rights.
it is called Amendment
They are called Amendments
The first ten amendments.