Asked by chris

Hitler would gain control of Sudetenland and Czechoslovakia.
Hitler would gain control of Sudetenland, but respect the boards of Czechoslovakia.
Hitler would not gain control of any additional European land.
Hitler would not gain control of additional land if he also increasing the size of the German army.After World War I, how did the US economy compare to that of Germany?

The US economy was stronger.
The German economy was stronger.
Both economies were about equal.
Both economies shifted up and down.
fter Hitler came to power, German people of Jewish ancestry

lost their rights overnight.
gradually lost their rights.
left their homeland immediately.
gained the right of citizenship.
Look at this chart showing the economic impact of the Great Depression between 1929 and 1932.

A 4-column table with 3 rows is shown. Column 1 is not labeled with entries Industrial production, foreign trade, unemployment. Column 2 is labeled U S with entries down 46%, down 70%, down 607%. Column 3 is labeled Britain with entries down 23%, down 60%, down 129%. Column 4 is labeled Germany with entries down 41%, down 61%, down 232%.

According to this chart,
had the smallest increase in unemployment.
hat were the Nuremberg Trials?

trials in which Nazi leaders were charged with “crimes against humanity”
trials in which leading Nazi generals were accused of having lost the war on purpose
trials in which Adolf Hitler was ordered to return the stolen property of Jewish people
trials in which German people of Jewish ancestry were charged with having started World War II

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
- Hitler and the Sudetenland/Czechoslovakia: Hitler would gain control of Sudetenland and Czechoslovakia.
- After World War I, how did the US economy compare to Germany? The US economy was stronger.
- After Hitler came to power, German people of Jewish ancestry: gradually lost their rights.
- According to the chart, which had the smallest increase in unemployment? Britain (about 129% vs US ~607% and Germany ~232%).
- What were the Nuremberg Trials? Trials in which Nazi leaders were charged with “crimes against humanity.”