Chinese americans moved west and also the Cherokee Indians back than where they were forced to move west then they got killed and that is why they call it the trail of tears because some who made it to the west and others who didn't, they call it the trail of tears because they still got killed either way.
It really depends on the excerpt that you have been given. Is this the one? I found in somewhere on the Internet.
<span>The Bridegroom's doors are opened wide,
And I am next of kin;
The guests are met, the feast is set:
May'st hear the merry din.'
If this is the excerpt you have, then the answer is simple - alternating tetrameter and trimeter. Tetrameter means that there are 4 meters in one line, and given that one meter consists of two syllables, that would mean that there are 8 syllables in one line. Similarly, trimeter means that there are 3 meters, or 6 syllables in one line.</span>
Pontiac’s Rebellion was a war waged by Indians of the Great Lakes region against British rule after the French and Indian War. The Indians, who had formed alliances with the defeated French, were dissatisfied with treatment from British officials. Unlike their French allies, British officials entrusted with Indian relations refused to offer gifts to tribal leaders such as guns, gunpowder, and ammunition. Furthermore, English settlers began displacing Indians from their land. While French settlers and Indians seemed to live in relative harmony, the sheer number of English settlers that descended on the region prompted many Indians to support war. The Indians began to feel as if the British were preparing for war against them. The rebellion lasted three years, from 1763 to 1766. Much of the war’s terrible violence occurred in 1763; the remaining years were spent formulating peace treaties. The war was named after Pontiac, chief of the Ottawa tribe. Indians from many tribes including the Ottawa, Ojibwa, Shawnee, Miami, Huron, Seneca and Potawatomi participated in the uprising.
<span>or do you have questions
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On 1967 of April, with the United States at war in Vietnam, Ali declined to be accepted into the military, saying "I ain't got no squabble with those Vietcong." On June 20, 1967, Ali has indicted draft avoidance, sentenced to five years in jail, fined $10,000 and restricted from boxing for a long time.