This quote has no mention of a deity (divine authority) or society as a whole (civil obedience), and the only mention of gender is the author's reference to his sibling as "brother." The final line "<span>I won't be caught betraying him." drives the assumption that failing to do his "duty to [his] brother" would violate some sort of bond between he and his brother. Since we only know this relationship as familial, we must assume familial loyalty is the theme.</span>
The Iroquois perform rituals to honor
the twins in "The World on Turtle's Back," illustrating the Iroquoian
belief that the twins are gods and it is important to show them devotion.
To add, the Iroquois<span> were known during the colonial years to the </span>French<span> <span>as the "Iroquois League," and later
as the "Iroquois Confederacy," and to the </span></span>English<span> <span>as the "Five Nations" (before 1722),
and later as the "Six Nations," comprising the </span></span>Mohawk<span>, </span>Onondaga<span>, </span>Oneida<span>, </span>Cayuga<span>, </span>Seneca<span>, and </span>Tuscarora<span> <span>peoples.</span></span>
Stopping slavery and taking big voyages
Answer:
called “The Gender Gap and Goal-Setting/Accomplished
Explanation:
hope this helps
Answer:
"heard his cries" is the predicate
Explanation:
This sentence is in basic subject-predicate form. "No one" is the subject (it is what the sentence is about) and "heard his cries" is the predicate (it is what "no one" is doing).