History, 19.07.2019 11:10 amandaaarmentaa
Read the passage from elizabethan ettiquette. sometimes guests brought their own knives and spoons, and sometimes they were furnished by the host. if not eating something soft or soupy that required a spoon, people ate with their fingers, using their knives only to take food from the main serving platter and to cut it when necessary. the knife was placed on the right side of the trencher, and the bread was on the left. cups were not placed on the table. if a guest wanted a drink, he or she would ask a servant, who would bring them a cup that was kept on a side table or sometimes in a cool bath of water. when the guest finished drinking, they would return the cup to the servant, who would rinse it out, making it ready for the next guest. based on the explicit and implicit information from the passage, the reader can infer that a. tableware was rarer in elizabethan times than it is today. b. elizabethan diners were more informal than modern diners c. the elizabethans liked sharing more than modern people do d. guests were happier in elizabethan times than they are now.** i think its one of the top two**
Answers: 1
History, 21.06.2019 21:20
Which events are correlated but do not necessarily have a causal relationship?
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History, 21.06.2019 22:00
Which is the main inference that can be drawn from adam smith's book the wealth of nations? a) for an economy to work flawlessly, it shouldn't have to serve and moral goals.b) the government must control a free-market economy, or economic problems will arise.c) a free-market economy works well only without the government's interference. d) free trade will only hurt economies and should be stopped by governments.
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History, 22.06.2019 05:00
What was the mame given to the idea that americans should expand across the nation ro the pacific coast
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Read the passage from elizabethan ettiquette. sometimes guests brought their own knives and spoons,...
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