.What areas did the United States acquire as a result of the Spanish-American War?

Guam, Cuba, and the Philippines
Spain, Cuba, and the Philippines
Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines
Puerto Rico, Cuba, Guam and Spain

Answers

Answer 1
Answer: c.) Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines
Answer 2
Answer:

Answer:

c. Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines

(i just had this question on my test)


Related Questions

The official title of the Marshall Plan was "The __________." United Nations European Union European Recovery Program North Atlantic Treaty Organization
6. What did the Edict of Milan proclaim?a. Christianity was the new state religion of the Roman Empireb. The Roman Empire was endedC. Christians were traitors to the Roman stated. Christianity would be officially tolerated
Why are airplanes heading west slowed by the jet stream?
How did Rome's expansion after the Punic Wars affect Rome's social development? Fewer people were rich. Fewer people were poor. The slave population decreased. The social order changed.
In one or two sentences explain why there is no excess demand for excess supply at the equilibrium price

Explain the ways in which the geography of the west was a factor in its settlement?

Answers

Answer:

1 way that the geography of the west was a factor in it's settlement was partially due to the fact that it was unexplored land and that where the settlers came from, the monarchs were greedy. however, the land was fertile enough to give good harvests. Since the west was vast, but the journey was hard, the homestead act came into being and so therefore, more settlers came and inhabited the west.

Explanation:

What is Richard Allen is known for? (select all that apply)Question 3 options:

Founding the African Methodist Episcopal Church


Opening a school for black children in Philadelphia


Earning an honorary degree


With his friend Absalom Jones, founding the Free African Society


Going to Africa and resettling

Answers

Answer:

Richard Allen is known for founding the African Methodist Episcopal Church  , opening a school for black children in Philadelphia and, with his friend Absalom Jones, founding the Free African Society.

Explanation:

Richard Allen was an African American religious leader. He was born a slave, in 1760, in a family belonging to a successful Pennsylvania lawyer, Benkamin Chew, being sold with his family to a Delawer farmer in 1768. In 1777, after most of his family had been resold, he converted to methodism. Around the age of twenty, he managed to buy his freedom, becoming a Methodist preacher, even among whites, something infrequent in the United States at the time. At twenty-seven he was one of the founders of the Free African Society of Philadelphia, perhaps the first independent organization of free blacks in the USA. At thirty-five, he was the spiritual leader of Philadelphia's largest black congregation, the African Methodist Episcopal Church. In 1817 he was forced to break with the white leadership of the Methodist church that controlled and limited the activity of black religious congregations. Self-taught, he was the author of many sermons and texts related to his activism. He also worked on establishing schools for blacks and creating mutual aid societies to free free blacks from dependence on whites.

- Founding the African Methodist Episcopal Church

- Earning an honorary degree

- Founded the Free African Society

Which trail was popular from 1843 to 1870 and ran from Independence, Missouri, to the Willamette River Valley?

Answers

The trail that was popular from 1843 to 1870 and ran from Independence, Missouri, to the Willamette River Valley was the Oregon Trail.

The Oregon Trail was one of the main routes of migration by land of North America, that departed from several places in the Missouri river and arrived until the Territory of Oregon.

The five to six months of travel allowed to cross more than half of the continent and the caravans, departing from Missouri, crossed the lands of what later would be five states of the USA: Kansas (1861), Nebraska (1867), Wyoming (1890), Idaho (1890) and Oregon (1859). In addition, some of the branches of this route became the main arteries that fed settlers six other states: Colorado, Utah, Nevada, California, Washington and Montana.

The answer will 100% be the Oregon Trail!

Which are characteristics of life in Sparta but not Athens?Choose all answers that are correct.

A.
A council of aristocrats wielded most of the political power.

B.
Girls were encouraged to write poetry or weave fancy cloth.

C.
The people took great pride in their temples and monuments.

D.
Males served in the army from age seven until they reached 30.

Answers

D... the males in sparta served in the army from age 7 to age 30

Hope this helped!!! :)
The answer is D, the Spartans had their males trained in combat at a very young age until they were very well into adulthood.

F today's major religions, which two are monotheistic?

Answers

Judaism and Christianity are probably the answer, however, Islamism is also monotheistic. (Judaism and Christianity are very popular.) Monotheistic means to only believe in one god.

Which river was not part of the Louisiana Purchase?A.
Mississippi River

B.
Arkansas River

C.
Missouri River

D.
Ohio River

Answers

The correct option is D

The Ohio is a river of the east of the United States that flows in southeasterly by the states of Pensilvania, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois - forms the southern limit of these three last ones, West Virginia and Kentucky - forms the northern limit of these two - Draining in the Mississippi River near the city of Cairo (Illinois). It has a length of 1579 km, but with one of its sources, the Allegheny River, it reaches 2108 km, which places it among the 10 largest rivers in the United States. It drains a basin of 490 601 km², out of a total of 14 states, most of the northeast of the country.

It has a major importance in the history of the United States, both for the Amerindian tribes and for the European settlers, since it was a privileged transportation route during the conquest of the West. Its main tributaries are the Tennessee, on the left, and the Wabash, on the right. In the eighteenth century it constituted the southern frontier of the northern states, de facto marking the boundary between the states that practiced slavery and those that had abolished it.

the answer is D the Louisiana Purchase cover all of the west of the Mississippi River