i donut know
i imagine would be good because not to mush pressure for work or school
2006-10-15 15:21:09
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answer #1
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answered by juanita2_2000 7
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you can only travel a short realistic time to the out upper end of the Manchurian border and beyond to find cave people of have no plumbing no lights and no power at all living in desolation and lost in time, they are there and still would look much at home if you dropped them in the seventeenth century,he would die before thirty five, if he was near the Barbary coast he could be shanghaied and taken to sea and never return, he could be at the golden age of entrepreneurial significances, deasie and starvation drove man to create the steam engine to move sea transportation, all thing were in the very tip of and older generation it q 1790, it wasn't extremely new in any way except for exploration, here would be the setting of your regular guy, life would be like a televisions is today he would have lived in the face of world exploration and wanting to be able to have better than what he had and the promises keep the world moving they don't get the promises but the forest of Europe had been cut down and was used up as fire woods centuries before and it was bitterly cold and the new world had everything forest as far as you could see. they say when they got here they burned everything in sight just for six hundred years of, going miles in to the country for fire wood in Europe, there is always the slim chance that your parents do not sell you endenture you out til you are of age or trade you as barter, perils of youth were not in their hands but in the pressures of the parents, most ran away to the new world
2006-10-15 22:58:23
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answer #2
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answered by bev 5
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very very hard, depending on the time of year! In winter things slowed to a crawl. Just staying warm and fed was a major chore. During warm months , much time spent preparing to survive another winter. We had what was called the mini ice age during that period. On top of just surviving there were hostile Indians, If you got sick you either survived or died, there were no decent medicines. Hygiene was suspect at best. You would not want to trade with them.
2006-10-16 17:14:32
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answer #3
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answered by r j 2
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That would depend on who they were and where they lived. A wealthy merchant's daughter in Oslo would have an entirely different life than a farm girl in upstate New York (or even a wealthy merchant's daughter in Tangiers!).
Read Martha Ballard's diary (available online) or some of Mary Wilkins Freeman's short stories, they are a wealth of information and will give you information on what life was like in 18th century New England.
http://www.dohistory.org/diary/
http://home.comcast.net/~WilkinsFreeman/#C_NENun
2006-10-15 23:13:56
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answer #4
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answered by blueprairie 4
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get up from my straw bed,cook up some groul,a quick face wash in the stream outside,go to work for 14 hrs and earn 50cents,later maybe go to a public hanging for a bit of entertainment then to the inn for a few ales then back to bed and do it all again the next day,
2006-10-15 22:41:55
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Wake up>clean body>eat breakfast>go to work or hunt>work or hunt>have lunch> work or hunt again>go home>eat dinner>clean body>go to bed>read book or make love>close candle>sleep
2006-10-15 22:44:00
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answer #6
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answered by Jazz 3
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It depends on where they lived, whether they were a grown man, woman, or a child, and what level of income they had.
2006-10-15 22:25:09
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answer #7
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answered by Iamnotarobot (former believer) 6
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Hard work,,,build fire,,gather food,,cook food,,tend to the animals.you would have to grow everything or make everything.probaly not alot of leisure time
2006-10-15 22:24:58
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answer #8
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answered by heartzz_ablaze 3
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