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Questions About A Foriegn Show Called

2 questions on reagan?

1. Reagan's foreign policy called for
a.making an alliance with the Soviet Union.
b.limiting American intervention in the affairs of other nations.
c.taking an active role against communism.
d.protecting the island of Cuba from invasion.

2. During the Reagan administration, the federal deficit
a.seesawed up and down.
b.was somewhat reduced by new taxes.
c.rose dramatically.
d.decreased significantly.

please help

A few questions about hosting a foreign exchange student?

1. Can our exchange student attend religious services with my family?
Yes, they can attend but it should be optional, not forced. You can help ensure that those at church understand that your guest is visiting to learn about YOUR culture and beliefs but should not be pressured to convert or condemned in a any way for her own religion - or lack thereof. (Isn't this what you would want if you stayed with a family that was Catholic, Unitarian, or Islamic?)

2. Can my exchange student be at home with my family without me for a couple of days? Probably yes. The ANDEO organization will actually place a teen with "empty nesters" or childless parents, as long as there is a teen who will be in very regular contact with the visiting teen. By that reasoning, you being gone for a couple of days shouldn't be a deal breaker.

3. What about going to my dad's house? Probably no. Your visiting teen could go on a trip with you AND your mother, because having your mother there means that there is an adult present who passed their background checks and has signed an agreement to follow their rules. This would not be true at your dad's.

Would your parents be flexible at all about rearranging your visitation to accommodate the hosting schedule? For example, you might not visit your dad for the month that that you are hosting, with extra visits scheduled before and after? It's nice when parents are willing to take their teen's busy schedule into consideration; camps, practices, school events, and other activities can make an every-other-weekend schedule hard to follow. Even most court ordered visitation has a degree of flexibility if both parties agree.

What do you call a person who asks a lot of questions (the word starts with ‘quis’)?

As others have said, one word to describe someone who poses (not asks) a lot of questions is “inquisitive.” [You don’t “ask” a question - you pose it. If you pose a question, you are asking something. I learned this while living in Switzerland and becoming fluent in French.]However, in order to provide a more complete answer, one must know something about why the questions are being posed. If it’s a hostile lawyer in court, he is more likely than not badgering the witness, and so he is a badgerer. If it’s someone posing questions to throw you off as you try to present an argument, then the person is digressive or obstructive or deflective. If it’s someone who just doesn’t want to accept perfectly good answers given and keeps asking the same thing in different ways, then he is a perseverator and perhaps also a quibbler. If it’s a small child posing questions to which she knows or ought to know the answer, and is only seeking attention, then she is obnoxious and needs a spanking. I’m sure I’ve omitted some contexts.

Have question on spanish trivia!!? Help gets 10 points!?

Chapultepec is a major avenue in Mexico City.

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Question 2 2 points Save
The King and Queen of Spain just got married last year.

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Question 3 2 points Save
The King and Queen of Spain live in a home called la Zarzuela.

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Question 4 2 points Save
The President of Argentina lives in a white house.

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Question 5 2 points Save
The Haciendas in Mexico used to be places where people went to have fun and go on vacation.

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Question 6 2 points Save
Mexico's president lives in Los Pinos.

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Question 7 2 points Save
Foreign governments own homes and buildings in Washington DC for their ambassadors and offices of their embassies.

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Question 8 2 points Save
Las Ramblas and El Rastro are interesting places to shop in Spain.

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Question 9 2 points Save
The Bazaar Sábado takes place on Fridays in Mexico.

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Question 10 2 points Save
The majority of Spanish-speaking countries all use the same peso.

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Reagan's foreign policy called for?

a. taking an active role against communism
b. protecting the island of cuba from invasion
c. limiting american intervention in the affairs of other nations
d. making an alliance with the soviet union

US Constitution Test Questions?

All of these questions can be found in your study guide you probably got for the test. I had to pass 8th grade once too. You see this is the United States Constitution. It is the single most important document in US history.

This is the stuff that you should consider a duty to learn because it is your rights. This is what protects us from everyone else out there.

If your study guide cannot help you or you did not get one go to a library and look up the info in the many books on US History or online as you can. This is some pretty easy stuff and very important stuff.

I hate to sound so old and lame but it is what it is...Besides, did you really think someone would come and answer 50+ questions for you?

Need help with these two question about Reagan?

1. Use your completed Reading Guide for lesson 6.03 to answer the following question.

Which phrase best describes the Reagan Doctrine?
(Points: 2)
a program of supplying foreign nations with troops, money, weapons, and advisers to fight communism

Reagan's program of sending religious leaders to meet with members of communist governments

a plan for training the police forces of communist nations

a program in which Reagan called for agricultural experts to teach farmers better ways of growing crops



2. Use your completed Reading Guide for lesson 6.03 to answer the following question.

How was Mikhail Gorbachev's outlook different from that of Soviet leaders before him?
(Points: 2)
Gorbachev wanted to radically increase military spending and the development of nuclear weapons.

Gorbachev thought that Soviet citizens should be allowed to speak openly about their society's problems.

Gorbachev wanted to build a stronger wall between East and West Berlin.

Gorbachev wanted to overthrow socialism and install capitalism in the Soviet Union.

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