the Indians
They fought for a cause they believed in, with a strong desire to be free. They got help from European nations. They knew the land better and did not have to travel 3000 miles back and forth for the supplies that they needed.ANSWERAnother advantage was the difference in fighting strategies that the Americans used. England was still stuck in the old tradition of large armies moving in straight lines forward towards the enemy, which in Europe was usually another large army in straight lines, but in America was a small mobile army hiding behind stone walls and in gullies firing into England's straight lines. American troops would hit and run, ambush and retreat, and generally wreak havoc on a large slow moving British Army.Read more: What_advantages_helped_the_Americans_win_the_Revolutionary_War
the wreak of the Edmund Fitzgerald sunk on November 10th 1998 i think that is the year but im am posotive of the actual date and it sunk near Cleveland and it only had 15 more miles till it reached land the edmund fitzgerald sank on Nov. 10 1975. and it sank closer to whitefish bay than cleveland. it was headed fot cleveland.
Wreaked havoc.
Your toddler is wreaking havoc in the living room.
He wreaked havoc on his enemies.
havoc means devistation do you dev-as-tation? devastationThe word havoc is a noun and means destruction, confusion, and disorder. This word originated in the 15th century.
Yes.
it can cause a lot of damage
Dennis the Menace could wreak havoc on arrival. Many people waste their lives by attempting to wreak vengeance.
He was a bold child and would always wreak havoc wherever he went.I would wreak the chip bag if it tore at the bottom of the bag.wreak-to inflict or execute.
What type of software should you have on your computer to check for Trojan horses, worms, and other files that can wreak havoc to your computer?
The earthquake caused havoc in the city, destroying buildings and disrupting services.
The most common use of the term is to "wreak havoc" on something or someone. It means to bring a usually negative and wild force to bear; to inflict
S. Pain has written: 'How the heat trap will wreak ecological havoc'