Social Sciences, asked by bistakaran888, 1 month ago

Assertion (A): There was no British nation prior to the eighteenth century . Reason (R): The primary identities of the people who inhabited the British Isles were ethnic ones – such as English, Welsh, Scot or Irish. All of these ethnic groups had their own cultural and political traditions. *
1 point
(A) If both assertion (A) and reason (R) are true and reason (R) is the correct
explanation of assertion (A).
(B) If both assertion (A) and reason (R) are true but reason (R) is not the correct
explanation of assertion (A).
(C) Assertion (A) is true but reason (R) is false.
(D) Both assertion (A) and reason (R) are false.​

Answers

Answered by sadhushalu0506
12

Answer:

B.both assertion and reason are true but reason is not correct explaination of assertion.

Answered by tushargupta0691
0

Answer:

The correct response to the question is (B), which states that while both the claim and the reason are true, the reason is not the proper justification for the assertion.

Explanation:

There was no British Nation prior to the 18th century. The British Isles were home to a variety of ethnic groups, including the English, Welsh, Scots, and Irish. The British nation did not exist before the eighteenth century. Ethnic identities like English, Welsh, Scots, or Irish were the main identities of those who lived in the British Isles. These ethnic groups each had unique political and cultural traditions. Ethnic identities like English, Welsh, Scots, or Irish were the main identities of those who lived in the British Isles.

The English nation's influence over other island nations grew along with its wealth and power.

#SPJ3

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