Most of the Koreans who came to Japan in the fifth and sixth centuries came from
a. Silla.
b. Paekche.
c. Koguryo.
d. Koryo.
e. Kaya.
b
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Which one of the following statements BEST describes the relationship between advances in technology and American imperialism, according to the textbook?
A) On the one hand, advances in transportation and communication made the world seem smaller and more dangerous, but on the other hand, these advances made reaching out to global markets easier and thus more compelling. B) On the one hand, Americans wanted access to technologies being developed abroad, but on the other hand, the nation hoped to achieve technological supremacy through its own innovation. C) On the one hand, the United States wanted to remain technologically competitive with Europe, but on the other hand, many Americans felt they would advance more by focusing inward and developing their own talents. D) On the one hand, advances in communication made the peoples of other nations seem less foreign and threatening, but on the other hand, these advances had many in the United States worried about the possible transformation of American identity. E) On the one hand, advances in manufacturing resulted in the creation of products that industrialists hoped to market abroad, but on the other hand, American shipping was not yet sufficiently advanced to offer the broad reach industrialists were hoping for.
In the Middle Ages, literacy was taught to __________.
A. townswomen as well as men B. boys of noble birth only C. both genders in the towns and on country manors D. boys of all social classes but not women
Which of the following statements accurately reflects the differences between single working-class women and married working-class women in the nineteenth century?
A) Married women commonly hired maids and cooks to ease the burden of their work at home, whereas single women usually did most of the work themselves. B) Married women commonly worked under sweatshop conditions within the tenements, whereas single women often viewed outside work as an opportunity. C) Married women worked in cigar factories, whereas single women did needlework at home. D) Married women were able to work in factories because of the large number of unmarried women available to provide childcare. E) Married women had the assistance of their husbands at home and in the factory, while single women accepted an ideology of domesticity based on the idea of separate spheres.
In the 1780s, American manufacturers wanted to replace the various state tariffs with a uniformly high national duty.
Answer the following statement true (T) or false (F)