False.
No. The revolution broke into factions which turned violently against each other. Thousands were imprisoned, tortured and murdered. The revolution ended with Napoleon becoming emperor and invading the rest of Europe.
Members of the 3rd estate were inspired by the American Revolution. They began questioning long standing notions about the structure of society. They demanded equality, liberty, and democracy.
Thomas Jefferson thought that equality was right
Oppurtunity, Rights, Liberty, Democracy and Equality
Liberty, Equality, Fraternity
1. right to liberty property security2.freedom from oppression3. equel access to public office (not just nobility)4. end of aristocratic privelege5.fair taxationOrfirst estate had a taille (aka chief tax of 2%)landownership majority were commoners.second estate didnt have a taille.third estate paid half their income to taxes.third estate had least amount of rights.
The word "is" implies equality - an equation. An equality would be expressed different, for example, "is more than", "is at least", etc.
liberty, fraternity, equality
False.
Liberty, Fraternity & Equality, that was the phrasology. The reality was very, very different. I am not sure there was much of any of it. Chopping peoples heads off because they are the Nobility just made other people fill the vacuum.
French Revolution is a group of people who fought on economic crisis on freedom and equality
equality, fraternity and liberty
Liberty, equality, and fraternity
fraternity, equality and liberty
Fraquility is not even a word. This "word" was used in the answer to what the French Revolution accomplished. It says the Revolution accomplished Liberty, Equality & Fraquility. The battle cry of the Revolution was Liberty, Equality, Fraternity. This is what they hoped to accomplish.
assuming you are referring to the French revolution than the answer is "Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity"