It is usually attributed to Colonel William Prescott, but Frenchy is correct, there is no proof he said it or if it was even said at that battle. I like to think it was.
There's no verifiable evidence that indicates Betsy Ross actually made the first flag. Research suggests that her grandson made the story up around the time of the centennial in 1876.
Tough quiz, if you're a non-American. Good though. One of those where I'd like to see the split in scores between American (and possibly Canadian) takers and those of us from the rest of the world.
He was a philosopher and political theorist, and is generally credited within the discipline as the first political scientist (he tried to bring the then-current understanding of science to the study of politics).
Perhaps the description could read something like "a theologian and a philosopher."
Looked it up, and you are partially right. The motto is "In God We Trust", but "E Pluribus Unum" was never officially the motto! In any case, the question has been fixed.
Nope, you've got it confused. NC-17 replaced the "X" rating. It means no children under the age of 17 allowed even if they have parental permission. Under 17's can see "R" movies with parental permission.
Seriously, you can put the first three letters of the capital of Burkina Faso and get credit. But you have to put the "e" in Hobbs in order to get credit. Weak sauce!!!
He was a philosopher and political theorist, and is generally credited within the discipline as the first political scientist (he tried to bring the then-current understanding of science to the study of politics).
Perhaps the description could read something like "a theologian and a philosopher."
In New England it's like old England, AW.
while the "R" is much stronger, having replaced the former "X" rating.
From Nat Geo: "A peninsula is a piece of land that is almost entirely surrounded by water but is connected to the mainland on one side."
My guess was Florida, or some East Coast state, like Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, etc.
Tbf, it looks like Michigan is @50-100% wider than Florida. And my guess is that the Northern chunk is sparsely inhabited (the Upper Peninsula AFAIK)