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Originally posted by aragonn on 29 Apr 2018, 08:38.
Last edited by generis on 17 Oct 2021, 00:13, edited 2 times in total.
Renamed the topic and edited the question.
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Unlike the roads of the Etruscans, which were made predominantly through repeated use, an assumption of longevity was demonstrated throughout ancient Rome: with cobblestone surfaces built to connect cities indefinitely, internally and externally, without reliance on regular usage.
A. the roads of the Etruscans, which were made predominantly through repeated use, an assumption of longevity was demonstrated throughout ancient Rome: with cobblestone surfaces
B. the roads of the Etruscans, which were made predominantly through repeated use, an assumption of longevity was demonstrated throughout ancient Rome: cobblestone surfaces were
C. the repeated use of roads by the Etruscans, which is predominantly how they were made, ancient Rome demonstrated an assumption of longevity throughout: cobblestone surfaces
D. Etruscan roads, which were created predominantly through repeated use, the roads throughout ancient Rome demonstrated an assumption of longevity: cobblestone surfaces
E. Etruscan roads, which were created predominantly through repeated use, an assumption of longevity was demonstrated throughout ancient Rome: cobblestone surfaces that were
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