<u>Let's match each term with its definition</u>
- desecrate: to destroy or damage offensively a sacred object or thing. For many social groups, it is considered a big offense and provocation when, for example, someone damages (desecrates) publicly a religious symbol.
- tolerance: accepting the different views or beliefs of others. It involves respecting and valuing diversity.
- domestic: any conditions related to the internal affairs of a nation. It is a term used to refer to any sphere (economic, political, social, etc) which is inner to a country, acting in opposition to the term 'foreign'.
- envoy: official diplomat or representative of a nation. Such people are state employees who are sent abroad to represent in front of others the domestic interests of their home country.
Still, while women were highly valued participants in Mongol society, they still held less rank than their fathers, husbands and brothers. Work was divided between men and women; the men handled the herds and went to battle, and women raised the gers, made the clothes, milked the animals, made cheese and cooked the food. Men and women raised their children together. Children of the Mongols did not attend a school; rather they learned from their families the roles and work of men and women. Mongol children had toys and played games, much as children of any culture.
Answer:
Virginia's
Explanation:
Virginia's Early Relations with Native Americans | Colonial Settlement, 1600s - 1763 | U.S. History Primary Source Timeline | Classroom Materials at the Library of Congress | Library of Congress.
Desecrate - To destroy or damage offensively a sacred object or thing
tolerance - accepting the different views or beliefs of others
Domestic - any conditions related to the internal affairs of a nation
envoy - an official diplomat or representative of a nation