How did Frederick William I differ from Frederick the Great in use of military power?
A. Frederick William I was interested in a strong military while Frederick the Great disliked military strength.
B. Frederick the Great was interested in a strong military while Frederick William I disliked military strength.
C. Frederick William I avoided putting his powerful army into places of conflict while Frederick the Great advanced destructive invasions.
D. Frederick William I was reckless with his military strength while Frederick the Great rarely went to war.
E. Frederick the Great was known for his diplomacy outside of warfare while Frederick William I was known for his aggressive military policies.
Answer: C
You might also like to view...
By the __________, South Carolina’s planters relied primarily on the labor of enslaved Africans
A) 1500s B) 1600s C) 1700s D) 1800s
Woodrow Wilson’s decision to invade Mexico in 1916 followed raids on border towns by _____
A) Vittorio Zapata B) Pancho Villa C) Francisco Madero D) Victoriano Huerta E) Carlo Ponti
Research on Asian American women who joined sororities demonstrates that:
a. those who joined predominately White sororities often did so to distance themselves from images of Asian femininity. b. those who joined Asian sororities had their ideas of Asian women as passive and childlike confirmed by the women they met. c. those who joined predominately African American sororities were least racist than those who joined predominately Asian or White sororities. d. those who joined predominately White sororities had their ideas of White women as assertive and independent challenged by the women they met.
The most serious consequence of the 1970s oil shock for America was the __________
a. collapse of several Arab states that were friendly to the United States b. loss of international respect for Americans c. decline of the automobile culture in the United States d. beginning of the mass exodus from American suburbs e. rampant inflation that resulted from it