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Showing posts with label hard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hard. Show all posts

Aug 27, 2019

[Answer] 5. The Gambia is split east to west by which of the following rivers? (Don't think too hard on this one.)

Step 1 : Introduction to the question "5. The Gambia is split east to west by which of the following rivers? (Don't think too hard on this one.)"



...1. The Gambia River 2. The Indus River 3. The Nile River 4. The Po River The Gambia River is one of the larger rivers found in West Africa and is approximately 700 miles (1,130 km) long. It runs from the country of Guinea westward to the Atlantic Ocean. Only about half of the river is navigable and runs right through the center of the country. The country of The Gambia is very small and consists of little more than the river and the banks on either side. The Gambia is only about 4,000 sq mi and water covers over 10% of the country.

Oct 10, 2018

[Answer] A soldier will fight long and hard for a bit of colored ribbon. This great strategist ended his career making some very bad decisions before being exiled. Who was he?

Step 1 : Introduction to the question "A soldier will fight long and hard for a bit of colored ribbon. This great strategist ended his career making some very bad decisions before being exiled. Who was he?"



...Napoleon was born in Corsica, which had just been taken over by France. He rose to power in France and after a successful military career became a bit full of himself, and ignoring his own apt advice that "an army travels on its stomach" he attempted an invasion of Russia. The Russians, using the scorched earth policy left nothing in the wake of their retreat, so most of Napoleon's ill-equipped army died of starvation, exposure or disease. Arriving finally in Moscow, they found the city in flames and nothing to conquer. Both Russian and German composers commemorated his defeat in their music: Tschaikovski in the "1812 Overture" and Beethoven by erasing his dedication of the 3rd symphony to Napoleon and calling it instead the "Eroica". Later in 1813 Napoleon did not fare well in the disastrous and costly Battle of Leipzig (the Battle of Nations). In 1815 he met Wellington at Waterloo, where the British, aided by Prussian troops as well as contingents from the Netherlands and Hanover, defeated Napoleon in his final downfall. One of the theories of Napoleon's death is that he was poisoned by arsenic on St. Helena, his final place of exile.