The Maori: Genealogies and Origins in New Zealand contrasts with "The Raven and the First Men: The Beginnings of the Haida" in the following way. The Raven is a central character in Haida mythology. He is sometimes known as a trickster, but the Haida believe that Raven is a complex reflection of myself. In Maori mythology the Maori believe there was nothing in the beginning. The beginning was made from nothing. The original parents, the Earth mother and the Sky father came from this nothingness. They had 70 male children who, in turn, became the gods of the Maori.
I am pretty sure it is A.
The benefit of using "I found myself" rather than a more direct syntax is that it suggests the narrator traveled without thinking of the time.
This phrase conveys the idea that the narrator have unintentionally realized the situation he was witnessing, the view he could admire, etc. Because of this phrase, we may say that the narrator became aware of the situation that the author is describing rather unexpectedly, because he was not thinking of the time.
A lion represents strength, power, and royalty. Many rulers over many centuries have used lions as an animal of pride. Babylon was an especially good kingdom that used them and even used them in executions to make the people fear them. A lion is a predator and so it makes the kingdom seem strong willed and dangerous as well as somehow holy. England used the lion as a symbol of Christ and just like the Greeks put Medusas' head on their soldiers' shields, England put the lion on the coat of arms as a symbol of protection, might, and yet again, royalty and a symbol of fear to a warring country.
Answer:
A.G. Spalding created the Rawlings "Soft Touch" Basketball in 1944.
Explanation: