Ayuda con la tarea de historia
La historia es un tema fascinante para algunos y aburrido para otros. Mientras que algunos estudiantes se emocionan con los diversos eventos, batallas y personalidades interesantes del pasado, a otros les resulta muy difícil memorizar la cronología de las batallas, los nombres de líderes influyentes y la gran cantidad de información que ofrece la materia.
Afortunadamente, con estas preguntas y respuestas de historia, le resultará fácil recordar algunos de los acontecimientos más importantes y la hora exacta en que sucedieron. No se preocupe demasiado, incluso si los nombres de estas personas clave le hacen girar la cabeza. Nuestra ayuda con la tarea de historia tiene una función de asociación de inteligencia artificial que las asociará con algunas historias interesantes para ayudarte a recordarlas mejor.
- 17. Which phrase best defines the Holocaust? The U.S. plan to relocate Japanese Americans to internment camps The Allied plan to liberate concentration camps in Eastern Europe The Nazi campaign to use genocide to eliminate European Jews in the Final Solution The Japanese military strategy to destroy U.S. aircraft carriers
- How was Mussolini able to gain power in Italy? He played to the prejudices of the Italians. He fought off Hitler's attempt to annex Italy. He led a coup to take over a weakened government. He proposed new ideas to solve the economic crisis.
- 1. Give a brief definition of key vocabulary-terms: Appeasement- Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact Manhattan Project Blitzkrieg Japanese Internmen Camps
- 4. What does Britain do in order to protect this "Lifeline of the Empire"?
- Rosa Parks and the Montgomery Bus Boycott Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on the bus to a white passenger in Montgomery Alabama. Example of nonviolent protest and best example of civil disobedience. In response to Rosa Park's arrest, African Americans began boycotting the Montgomery bus system. This boycott lasted over a year (thirteen months)and challenged segregation on public transportation . Freedom Rides were a series of protests throughout the south which sought to overturn racial segregation on public transportation. The Supreme Court had previously ruled segregation as unconstitutional but laws were seldom enforced. Questions: 1.Who refused to give up her seat? __ 2.What is this an example of? __ 3.What did the Montgomery boycott challenge? __ 4.What did Freedom Riders seek to overturn? __