El caballo tiene una importancia crucial en la lucha contra el indio puesto que brinda la velocidad para arremeter o retirarse de un batalla perdida.
<h3>¿Cómo fue la
lucha entre el
Indio y el
Hombre Blanco?</h3>
La lucha en un inicio entre el indio y el hombre blanco tuvo una desventaja inicial debido a la velocidad y alcance que le daba al hombre blanco el caballo, permitiéndole acercarse al indio cuando veía la oportunidad o alejarse en caso de que perdiera.
Por otra parte, las armas del indio, acudiendo a la naturaleza cercana, eran flechas de madera, estacas y cuchillos de piedra o hueso, los cuales junto a su conocimiento del territorio, le permitían dar una batalla un poco más equilibrada frente al hombre blanco.
Más información sobre los Indios: brainly.com/question/14538731
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Answer:
i dont get it is this a question??????
Explanation:
Strategies like "choose the best answer" mean that if the question was, for example, "in Charlottes web, how does Charlotte feel about the animals" the answers could then be:
a: she felt that they were here true friends
b: she liked them
c: she hated the animals
d: burrito
you know that d and c dont make any sense, but a and be are both correct. so which one is better? the one that is more detailed, but not just MORE detailed, but better detailed. so the answer would then be a
Answer:
um read the passage again?
One of the most important qualities that can help teens establish their own identities is the ability to "fit in." Finding friends who understand their problems and relate to them is paramount for teenagers.
Belonging to a gang instantly gives a teen an extended family. And that family automatically understands him, which is usually different from the family into which he was born. Gang membership also means that you are accepted. You are not an outsider; you are on the inside with at least one group.
Life isn't fair. The idea that life isn't fair is based entirely on one's perspective. Whether life is unfair to the greasers (the main characters' perspective) or to the Socs, (the rival groups' perspective) is a question that is recurrent in the novel. Rarely is injustice seen equally by all eyes.
Everyone who reads this book will definitely have face the some of issue that's the character faced. This is universal as it is realism, it's reality.
(Hope this helps.)