My reality adventure I would like to have is travelling to Africa. Meet my ancestors and contribute to cultures that I've always wanted to try. Meet people I've never seen before. Taste foods and discover things that I've always dreamed of. Just look back at history and discover where my people came from.
Answer:
The Great Tree was not allowed to be damaged or cut for it is the source/ producer of various fruits and leaves and also is the intermediary between the divine and human aspects of the world.
This is similar to the tree in the Garden of Eden in that they both act as the link or threshold between God and man, and their mutilation or destruction will mean that the cord/ relationship between the two will be broken.
Explanation:
According to the myth in "The World on Turtle's Back", the Great Tree represents the major source of life for the people. It contains different kinds of fruits and was the main source of food for the people.
Likewise, the tree in the Garden of Eden in the Biblical book of Genesis also acts as the main tree, producing the fruit of good and evil. It was this very fruit that God warned Adam and Eve to stay away from.
And both trees were not allowed to be mutilated or cut down. They are the source of life, the intermediary between what is divine and human. And so, their mutilation will mean a broken relationship/ connection between God and man.
Answer:
In order to convey a message of equal rights for all Americans that would inspire change in a mutually respectable and nonviolent way, he would need to convince Americans that the problem of racial inequality exists and to encourage them to take action in resolving the problem of racism, prejudice, and hatred by allowing freedom and equal rights for everyone.
Answer:
The line shown in the question above is an example of a metaphor.
Explanation:
The metaphor is a figure of speech that establishes a subjective comparison between two elements that have no explicit relation, but that can be compared in a poetic and implicit way creating a new meaning. Unlike the Simile, the metaphor does not always use the words "like" or "as" to establish the comparison. The sentence shown in the question above is an example of this, where wishes and thorns were compared implicitly, without using the words "like" and "as".
Answer:
my g-ma almost burnt my house down
Explanation: