No. Slavery is no longer legal in America, therefore dismissing the compromise which stated that slaves were counted as 3/5th of a person regarding representation and taxation for states.
It is called a compromise. Examples are the Great Compromise, and the Three-Fifths Compromise.
What was the federal compromise
Missouri Compromise was signed in 1820s. The Compromise of 1850 was signed in the 1850s
There is not a Compromise of 1950 but there is a Compromise of 1850. The Compromise of 1850 consists of five laws passed in September of 1850 that dealt with the issue of slavery.
Three-Fifths Compromise
faire, créer, fabriquer
Laizay faire
Faire in French is "to do" in English.
vous savez faire = you know how to do / you can do
Maker Faire was created in 2006.
Hell's Faire was created in 2003.
Laisse faire means never mid
faire means 'to do, to make' in French.
The motto of Fermont is 'Faire front, faire face'.
Hell's Faire has 416 pages.
This question gives a glimpse of what infinity could be... The real question should be how many uses of "faire" there are. The main translations of "faire" are "to do" (or "to act") and "to make". It can also mean "to play" (faire le mariole, faire de la musique, faire du sport). "to rule" (faire la pluie et le beau temps) "to care" (faire attention, faire gaffe) "to defecate" (faire dans son pantalon) "to ride" (faire du cheval) "to cycle" (faire du vélo) "to delude oneself" (se faire des illusions) "to worry" (se faire des soucis, se faire du mouron) "to run away" (faire une fugue) "to ignore" (faire l'autruche) And dozens more, since "faire" is a rather neutral verb that mostly takes the meaning of the noun or verb that follows, adding an extra action cause to it. For instance, "faire" + "plaisir" (pleasure) means "to please", "to give pleasure", "faire" + "tomber" (to fall down) means to make someone or something fall down.
The Company adopted a savoir faire strategic plan.