<span>Among the most unique of all Aztec adaptations,were chinampas, or floating gardens. These gardens covered specific parcels of land, like their terrestrial counterparts. However, chinampas functioned as floating islands, and allowed Aztecs to grow crops on makeshift farming lands on water.</span>
Answer:
c. frictionally unemployed
e. unemployed
Explanation:
Frictional unemployment refers to the condition when workers search for jobs for better opportunities in a healthy economy. Generally, it takes place when an individual is looking for job change. The good part is that there are jobs in the market from which one can choose. According to question Rabia declined the job offer, therefore, it is an example of frictional unemployment. She does not have a job means she is unemployed justifies option (e).
B. He was a Marxist who became disillusioned with the repressive policies of the Soviet government.
He was a Revolutionary, so he couldnt be in the Tsar’s army, so its not A.
He wasnt a supporter of Feliks’ Dzierżyńskis Cheka (kind of a police, very brutal), which we know both from his biography aswell as from this text, so its not C.
D. No, he said that the commune state was his (their) dream, and Kerensky was even a noble, which was not good for the commune state.
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there is no further reference to a specific question, we assume that you are asking for the main claim of the essay.
If that is the case, then the answer will be this one.
We are talking about the story of "Two Ways of Seeing a River," written by American author Mark Twain.
So the claim of the essay is to ponder what we have and leaves in our lives. What we could call the gains and possessions of life and the losses, all of them with their respective baggage of experiences that make us grow. It is about the different perspectives and changes in life, things that he reflected on when he was young while piloting steamboats in the Mississippi River.
This essay is part of his book "Life on the Mississippi," written in 1883.