Answer:
the most important thing that india brought to the world was religion
Explanation:
India is the birthplace of the so-called Dharmic religions: Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism. At present, Hinduism and Buddhism are, respectively, the fourth and second most practiced religion in the world, having between them about 2400 million followers in the whole planet.
India is one of the countries with the greatest religious diversity in the world, with one of the most deeply religious societies and cultures. Religion plays a central and definitive role in the life of the nation and many of its people.
Hinduism, which is the religion of more than 80.4% of the country's population, is considered the oldest religious and philosophical system in the world. Islam is practiced by about 13.4% of the Indian population. Sikhism, Buddhism and Jainism are systems of great influence, not only in India, but throughout the world. Christianity, Zoroastrianism, Judaism and Bajaism also have influence, but they have a much lower number of followers. Despite the great importance of religion in Indian life, atheism and agnosticism also have a visible influence.
I believe c is the answer because the word it's is saying it is
Spain had won, and declared independence that was split up into three colonies, the independence from Spain came suddenly for most of Latin america. even after this Spain still fought to keep its rich colonies, hoping those wouldn't be split, after giving independence to Latin america. if this dosent help, im sorry i tried my best, if i find more research on this topic i will be glad to share it with you. i did as good as i can for you right now, thank you for your time.
I just did this on apex so it is d the government introduced laws ect
Answer:
An act of war
Explanation:
The U.S. was not interested in war, however with the greatly increasing amount of America ships sunk in unrestricted submarine warfare, The U.S. was pushing towards war. The British intercepted the Zimmerman note that the Germans hoped the Mexicans received. This note was very threatening to the U.S. since it called for Mexico to invade America, including Texas and its borders. The U.S. most definitely didn't want a war on their own soil, against a neighbor.