This patriotic hymn, also called “America,” shares its tune, ironically, with “God Save the Queen,” the British National Anthem. Name it.
a. “My Country, ‘Tis of Thee”
b. “America the Beautiful”
c. “The Marines Hymn”

Answers

Answer 1
Answer: a.) My Country, Tis' of Thee
Answer 2
Answer: A is correct. “My Country, ‘Tis of Thee” was written by Samuel Francis, when he was 23 years old.

Related Questions

So that, thus it is that natural men are held in the hand of God, over the pit of hell...; and God is dreadfully provoked, his anger is as great towards them as to those that are actually suffering the executions of the fierceness of his wrath in hell, and they have done nothing in the least to appease or abate that anger, neither is God in the least bound by any promise to hold them up one moment; the devil is waiting for them, hell is gaping for them, the flames gather and flash about them, and would fain lay hold on them, and swallow them up... Jonathan Edwards, Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God, 1741 This primary document offers information about which aspect of Colonial culture? A. Manifest Destiny B. the Great Awakening C. the Anti-slavery movement D. the Independence movement
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How long is an individual monarch's term of rule?A.for as long as the people allowB.limited by a term of four years, with a maximum of two termsC.from the time of taking the throne to their deathD.until the monarch retires
What form of government was born in the ancient Greek culture?

Which statement best describes why the Indus River Valley civilization declined? A. Some theories are that the soil grew salty, disease killed many people, and the land became deforested. B. Archaeological evidence shows that the population declined from constant warfare. C. The accepted theory is that a huge flood wiped out almost the entire population. D. Written records from the time indicate that earthquakes destroyed the Indus River Valley cities.

Answers

 C. The accepted theory is that a huge flood wiped out almost the entire population. 
Yeah C. The accepted theory is that a huge flood wiped out almost the entire population.

In which area do the United States' state and federal governments share power?

Answers

The correct answer is A) collecting taxes.

The area in which the United States' state and federal governments share power is "collecting taxes."

The powers that are shared by the federal and state governments in the United States are called "concurrent powers." Among the concurrent powers that are shared by the federal and states government are to collect taxes, borrow and spend money, regulate rights of property, and provide public education of quality to the citizens.

The other options of the question were B) declaring war. C) forming international treaties. D)granting titles of nobility.

In the U.S., There are some powers delegated to the government only, and others that are reserved to the states. However, there are powers that both the government and the states have and can exercise simultaneously within the U.S. territory, these are called concurrent powers. The areas in which the federal govenrment and the states have concurrent power include in the power to tax, make roads, protect the environment, establish bankruptcy laws, create lower courts and regulate elections, among others.

Which statement about Pickett's charge at the battle of Gettysburg is not true

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I need the answer choices :)

What factors helped create the prosperity that many Americans enjoyed in the 1950s?

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Two major factors that helped create the prosperity that many Americans enjoyed in the 1950s were the increased production that had taken place during World War II, and that the fact that the US had largely been protect from the war by two major oceans. 

Which of the following was NOT an effect of Nat Turner’s Rebellion.

Answers

The rebellion was not an effect his uprising cemented Southern whites' support for slavery and resulted in additional harsh legislation that forbade the education, travel, and gathering of slaves.

What was Nat Turner's Rebellion?

The Southampton Insurrection, also known as Nat Turner's Rebellion, was a slave uprising that took place in Southampton County, Virginia, in August 1831.

One of the deadliest and most successful uprisings in American history was Nat Turner's. It is believed to have sped up the outbreak of the Civil War by igniting a culture of dread in Virginia that later spread to the rest of the South.

His action sparked a massacre that killed up to 200 Black people and resulted in a new wave of harsh laws that forbade enslaved people from gathering, moving, or attending school. The insurrection strengthened anti-abolitionist and pro-slavery beliefs that endured in that area until the American Civil War (1861–65).

Therefore, the rebellion was not an effect his uprising cemented Southern whites' support for slavery and resulted in additional harsh legislation that forbade the education, travel, and gathering of slaves.

To know more about the Nat Turner's rebellion, visit:

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What must have been allowed by the Romans for Christianity to spread so far and wide?

Answers

By the third century, Christianity was well established in and around Greece and the Middle East, as well as in Rome, Alexandria, Carthage and a few cities such as Lyons in the 'barbarian' western Europe.

Christianity had largely failed to penetrate Egypt outside Alexandria, or much of western Europe. Even Italy, outside the city of Rome, seems to have largely resisted Christianity. It seems that the Egyptian and Celtic religions had not entered a period of decline and scepticism in the way that the Greco-Roman religion had done. However, there was no impediment to Christians preaching in those areas, other than a lack of interest on the part of the population.

Christian tradition suggests that the Christians suffered constant harrassment and persecution by the Roman authorities. However, Euan Cameron (Interpreting Christian History: The Challenge of the Churches' Past) says, "Contrary to popular tradition, the first three centuries of Christianity were not times of steady or consistent persecution. Persecution was sporadic, intermittent, and mostly local." Edward Gibbon (The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire) goes further and, on a number of occasions, praises the pagan Romans for their general tolerance towards Christianity. Widespread and persistent persecution of other faiths only really began with the Christian Empire.

There was a total of perhaps 12 years of official persecution of Christianity during nearly three hundred years in which Christianity existed in the pagan Empire. Otherwise, the Christians were largely allowed to worship as they pleased, and even to proselytise their faith, as long as they took care not to offend others or disturb the peace. This allowed Christianity to prosper and spread far and wide.

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