It shall not effect the 1st and 4th clause in Article I section 9 of the constitution, and that no state, without its consent, shall be deprived of its equal suffrage in the senate.
The anti-federalists wanted the amendments to limit the federal government's power.
Well the answer to that question is very easy there is No limit on making an amendments. EDIT: There are 27 at this moment.
The only limit on amendments to the U.S. Constitution is that they cannot deprive any state of its equal representation in the Senate without that state's consent, as outlined in Article V. This ensures that while the Constitution can be amended to adapt to changing societal needs, states retain a fundamental aspect of their sovereignty in the legislative process. Other than this, amendments can address a wide range of issues, provided they follow the established procedures for proposal and ratification.
As many as needed, there is no limit. So far there are 27...
Seven years is the time limit~
The time limit to ratify an amendment is seven years. The first time this was imposed was on the 18th Amendment. Congress uses the time limit to avoid amendments lingering indefinitely before the States.
The states created the Bill of Rights to limit the FEDERAL government. Later amendments apply some of the Constitution to state and local governments.
to limit the powers of the states governments
They were only known as the 27 amendments. I know you would like the real answer but its not specific.
only 27 of the 31 amendments proposed have been ratified
There are only 27.
The amendments were the bill of rights. The anti-federalists feared a strong government would limit civil liberties and wanted guarantees written into the constitution.