1. What answers Hector when he sees That there is no use to the sick native woman? help her because she doesn’t work for them. 2. What ate all the coffee beans during Warthogs ate them. the night? 3. Why does Fikre say that she won Because she didn’t want to give after sleeping with Robert? her virginity to her master. 4. How does the workers keep their They all sing together. marching rhythm? 5. According to Hector, who are the The Indians better workers? 6. What instruments does the women The men receive an axe and and the men receive? the women, an hoe. 7. How are the workers distinguish from The workers wear a special the others? necklace. 8. At Lyon, from where is the tea sell? Through …show more content…
Why does Fikre have a particular Because she perfumes herself smell? with myrrh smoke. 10. What is the stupid experiment of Coffee with apple flavour. Pinker? 11. Why does someone scream during Because there was an the night? intruder in the camp. 12. What does ‘Crossing the water’ It means that the women were mean? going to withdraw from the life of the village. 13. Complete the sentence: The villager’s round huts were taken down, and the flat area on which they had previously stood was cleared for uses as a ____________________. Drying floor 14. Why does Fikre thinks that she’s Because she’s going to get sold gonna get killed? and the buyer will see that she is not a virgin anymore. 15. What does the travelers see in the A leopard. canopy? 16. Who does Hector blame for the He blames Kuma. leopard’s attack? 17. Who is the only person who can Robert is the only one that heal Hector as a surgeon? can do it. 18. For who those Emily send her love To Hector. letter? 19. What does Robert do to make Emily He send her a letter saying that suffer? he found another woman and that Hector is dead. 20. True or false? Robert stole Fikre so she False, he bought her
3. 120 MY : Continued erosion of the land as it is slowly uplifted and
“The cabin’s plank walls were supplemented with sheets of corrugated iron, its roof shingled with tin cans hammered flat, so only its general shape suggested its original design: square, with four tiny rooms opening onto a shotgun hall, the
At the same time, the local agricultural economy was experiencing a deep economic depression due to the severe droughs that had occured throughout the past decade. The loss of crops cut out the average farmers'/planters' main food source as well a...
...d his own ruin. His family is gone, and the thunderstorm that he headed towards has knocked a gutter “over the front door,” (Cheever 12) blocking his entrance.
Narrator 2: They lived in a old cottage in front of an old overgrown woods. There was a mother that lived with her two children.
and the settlement set up will include a meeting house, a village commons, large open lots which is very large and it contains kitchens and places where animals are kept and agricultural highland. The highlands were beautiful fields divided into segments and planting and harvesting were done together as a family.
This depiction of Nebamun hunting in the marshes dates to around the late 18th dynasty . Its formal qualities depict that of an Egyptian scribe on an outing with his family, while utilising proportion to emphasise the Egyptian values and beliefs of the day. Further analysis reveals strong iconographic meaning, particularily in relation to the habitat surrounding Nebamun and his family. When studying the piece in relation to social context, we see how death and the Afterlife were an essential part of Egyptian life as a whole.
When I found myself on my Feet, I looked about me, and must confess I never beheld a more entertaining Prospect. The Country round appeared like a continued Garden, and the inclosed Fields, which were generally Forty Foot square, resembled so many Beds of flowers. These Fields were intermingled with Woods of half a Stang, and the tallest Trees, as I could judge, appeared to be seven Foot high. I viewed the Town on my left Hand, which looked like the painted Scene of a City in a Theatre.
area. Every house had to have a bucket to put out fires, a safe room
homes for weeks. Left over meals were thrown onto the ground for animals, also feeding
Shameya sat cross-legged on the soft grass, her gluteal-globes molding the soft earth, creating rounded depressions fitted perfectly to her form. For about the 98th time she repeated the self-admonition that she should have brought a ruglet or even a blanket to her duty shift. No matter, the shifts were not arduous, and hers was the last one today. The sun was drifting toward the horizon and the danger increased rapidly the closer it got. She must soon return to the castle, to safety, to the room she shared with her sisters, where she can wash herself of any grass stains or soil before evening feast. Sitting on the bare ground was not a hardship.
B. SUBPOINT: Its casing stones was stripped off to use in rebuilding palaces and bridges.
improvements would give the house "such an air as to make its owner be set down
“… gave details of the house: it was white with black doors fitted with iron bars; four rooms were stuccoed, but other parts were less finished; the front floor was stone slabs. She loc...