<span>Religions
and numerals do not tend to mix. You might be talking about cultures that do
not have concepts of numerals i.e. words that designate numbers. Actually,
there are plenty of cultures that does that. For short, there are societies
where numbers and counting is non-existent. Some of these cultures include the
pre-contact Mocoví, Pilagá, Jarawara, Jabutí, Canela-Krahô, Botocudo (Krenák),
Chiquitano, the Campa languages, Arabela, Khoisan language speakers, and
Achuar. Before contact with modern civilization, these isolated cultures have
no idea about counting and numbering. It seems that counting developed in
cultures that engaged in commerce.</span>
Spain and Portugal.
The Treaty of Tordesillas<span>, (June 7, 1494), agreement between Spain and Portugal aimed at settling conflicts over lands newly discovered or explored by Christopher Columbus and other late 15th-century voyagers was ignored which caused the conflickt.</span>
Answer: 7 times!
Explanation: 1904, 1932, 1960, 1980, 1984, 1996, and 2002. Upcoming ones will be held in 2028!
Generally speaking, within the Kojiki, the names given to the deities show that they are "Descriptive of the land and sea of their origin," since this was one of the ways such deities were identified in the first place.
Answer:
Something
Explanation:
You said I have to say something