"The Great Amendment" Suffrage
The right to vote.
Suffrage
Gaining the right to vote is called enfranchisement.
(Suffragists are people seeking to establish the right to vote. Another female form was suffragette.)The suffragist movement accomplished a major goal with the passage of the 19th Amendment.
Some basic rights that slaves did not have included the right to vote, the right to marry freely, the right to own property, and the right to education. They also did not have the right to freedom of movement or the right to refuse to work for their owners.
"Suffrage" refers to the right to vote, while "franchise" can encompass broader rights and privileges beyond voting, such as the right to own property or run for office. In the context of voting rights, suffrage and franchise are often used interchangeably to refer to the right to participate in elections.
Another name for the local court is the municipal court.
The term that you are looking for may be women's suffrage.
The Women's Suffrage Amendment
Women who were seeking the right to vote were known as Suffragettes. This word is derived from suffrage, which means the right to vote.
the right to democratic veiws Suffrage
Suffrage
sufferagette sufferagette Women do not have to earn the right to vote, we are all born with the right to vote. It's up to governments to guarantee the right to vote to their citizens. If they don't, they're bad governments and should be changed.
This will have to be a laymans answer until corrected by someone more knowledgible. States may legally deny the right to vote to: 1. Those to young to qualify. 2. Non-residents. 3. Convicted felons. 4. Those with fradulent documents.
The right to vote.
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In the Maryland colony, only white men who owned property had the right to vote. Women, indentured servants, slaves, and free African Americans were not allowed to vote.
"Suffrage" means the right to vote The "gettes" Just Changed The Name
The right to vote is another way of saying that a person has the right to participate in an election, ballot measure, referendum, etc. Elections are typically the way officials are chosen in democracies. The right to vote implies the right to participate. See also popular sovereignty.