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1. choose the best answer. why are colonists not usually considered imm…

Question

  1. choose the best answer. why are colonists not usually considered immigrants? colonists are considered immigrants. colonists are still part of their old nation, which is expanding into a new area. colonists are not considered immigrants because they were forced to the new nation. colonists are not considered immigrants because they never left their home country. 2. match the facts with each person or group. restricted by immigration laws after 1882 came to the united states by force

Explanation:

Response
Question 1
Brief Explanations
  • Option 1: Contradicts the question's premise (asks why colonists are NOT usually considered immigrants).
  • Option 2: Colonists expand their home nation's territory, so they remain part of it, unlike immigrants who leave their home nation to join a new one. This fits.
  • Option 3: Colonists weren't typically forced (many colonized voluntarily for expansion/opportunity), so this is incorrect.
  • Option 4: Colonists did move to a new area (the colony), so they left their home region (even if part of the same nation's expansion), making this wrong.

Answer:

B. Colonists are still part of their old nation, which is expanding into a new area.

Question 2 (assuming common US immigration history context):

For "restricted by immigration laws after 1882", the group is typically Chinese immigrants (due to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882). For "came to the United States by force", the group is enslaved Africans (brought via the trans - Atlantic slave trade against their will). But since the dropdowns are not visible, if we assume typical options (e.g., Chinese immigrants for the first, enslaved Africans for the second):

  • First dropdown (restricted by immigration laws after 1882): Chinese immigrants (matches the Chinese Exclusion Act).
  • Second dropdown (came to the United States by force): Enslaved Africans (brought involuntarily via slavery).

(Note: If specific options were provided in the dropdown, the answer would be adjusted accordingly. But based on common US immigration history, these are the typical matches.)