Answer:
The Soviet Union Under Joseph Stalin
Explanation:
Starting in the late 1920s, Joseph Stalin launched a series of five-year plans intended to transform the Soviet Union from a peasant society into an industrial superpower.
Answer:
Not all. They are not common to both.
Judeo Christian's belief
An immortal soul
An afterlife for souls
One God
God is subject to fate or destiny
The world is a living thing, with body and soul
The earth began out of darkness and nothingness.
The God who creates the earth remains the ruler of all.
A great flood destroys most of humankind
A man builds an ark and is saved from the flood.
Greco Roman
God is void of nothingness.
What is common to both Judeo Christian and Greco Roman is
Concept of a Supreme Law or Ultimate Reality
Explanation:
Greco Roman and Judeo Christian religion differ from each other base on their belief. The Judeo Christian believed that only one God is the controller and ruled the universe while Greco Roman believe and accepts more than one god. They belief in many gods and one prayed and sacrifice to many gods. Though both religion beloved in supreme law but Judeo Christian believed in God's law and Greco Roman beloved in human written law.
God is a void of nothingness is not common to both. The Judeo Christian belief God is not empty, He is very much alive and full of alot of things.
All the events and trends that have happened in the past until present on local, national and global sphere are interrelated.
Let's take an example of Kosovo: who would have though that the fate of Kosovo is dependent on Independence movement in Spain? but it is is, as Spain doesn't want to recognize Kosovo, as it's afraid that it will have secession too. And Kosovo needs Spain's recognition to be a full member of UN.
Answer:
A portion of the precipitation seeps into the ground to replenish Earth's groundwater. Most of it flows downhill as runoff. Runoff is extremely important in that not only does it keep rivers and lakes full of water, but it also changes the landscape by the action of erosion.