meat eaters
revolution matters becasue it almost always causes change. except in Europe in 1848 when almost all countries revolted and didnt succeed in changing anything becasue they could not agree on how to change the past government leaving room for the old monarchs to step right back into place.
The media is what we allow it to be. If the consumers rejected the lies and demanded fair and objective reporting, we would get it. The problems with the media lie with politics, and American politics can be summed up pretty simply: "Everything the Republicans stand for is wrong and evil and hateful...and EVERYTHING else is OK!" And they mean EVERYTHING. Nothing is Taboo anymore, there is no shame in making bad decisions and such. There is a basic lack of honesty in society, and it shows in the media. The solution would be for the consumers to self-police their own side, demanding they be honest. But first they have the care.
You'll have to clarify where you mean by "spread of democracy." America? Russia? China? But sufragettes often made appeals to universal rights of man, especially the right to vote, that is at the center of democracy now. Sufragettes in Britain occupied a privileged position, too; they were part of one of the great imperialist powers so, despite the fact that they were marginal, their influence reached the rest of the world because of the fact that they lived in a superpower upon which the sun never set.
Resting ("fallowing") a different third of the land each year in theory allowed a third more food to be grown (as two-thirds would now be cropped rather than a half) and allowed for the introduction of legumes which returned nitrogen lost by the soil when planted with cereals, though fertility still relied heavily on the availability of livestock manure (perhaps the reason why many areas retained the two-field rotation, which might be less demanding of additional soil nutrients). So (again in theory) a third more people might be fed, though this would vary according to local conditions.
Resting ("fallowing") a different third of the land each year in theory allowed a third more food to be grown (as two-thirds would now be cropped rather than a half) and allowed for the introduction of legumes which returned nitrogen lost by the soil when planted with cereals, though fertility still relied heavily on the availability of livestock manure (perhaps the reason why many areas retained the two-field rotation, which might be less demanding of additional soil nutrients). So (again in theory) a third more people might be fed, though this would vary according to local conditions.
The bad cop was demanding, while the good cop was asking. Gigi was demanding too much from Christine. The job was too demanding. I was demanding a raise.
Demanding money while threatening legal action can be considered an act of extortion. Extortion and bribery are often the same crime when it involves the awarding of government contracts.
pretty demanding
Yes demanding is the present participle of the verb demand. demand demands demanded demanding
They can be very demanding and stubborn, but most are playful.
demanding telling someone something. etc what not to do and what to do.
Bobby Sands died as a consequence of a prolonged hunger strike which went on from March to May 1981. He was demanding political status for IRA prisoners in British jails. The then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher insisted that they should be treated as criminals.
The coach's drills are intentionally physically demanding.
By demanding them to stop demanding tribute, but the U.S. had to pay a ransom of $60,000 for the release of the American prisoners.
Tagalog Translation of DEMANDING: sobrang paggigiit ng sariling kagustuhan sa iba
She is very demanding when it comes to meeting project deadlines.
The most demanding in food industry is customer satisfaction and organization