Pretty sure the answer is E.
The correct answer is B) Although the Kamba chopped down the fig tree, the Masaai tribe is still connected with Enkai through their cattle.
<em>The option that best summarizes the resolution of the conflict at the end of “The Beginnings of the Masaai” is “Although the Kamba chopped down the fig tree, the Masaai tribe is still connected with Enkai through their cattle.”
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Enkai is the main character of the story. It is not a he nor a she. Its the powerful God of Sky. People should be careful with their behavior because it can provoke the anger or the beneplacit of Enkai. Enkai is always honored because its a deity that brings “the dark” of nigh that covers the tribe and also brings the vital rains to make life possible on the Earth. The option that best summarizes the resolution of the conflict at the end of “The Beginnings of the Masaai” is: Although the Kamba chopped down the fig tree, the Masaai tribe is still connected with Enkai through their cattle.
YES!! at least, i think so. It looks right. It's like 97-100 that it is a complex sentence...
Bananas ripe and green, and ginger rootCocoa in pods and alligator pears,And tangerines and mangoes and grape fruit,Fit for the highest prize at parish fairs,Sat in the window, bringing memoriesof fruit-trees laden by low-singing rills,And dewy dawns, and mystical skiesIn benediction over nun-like hills.My eyes grow dim, and I could no more gaze;A wave of longing through my body swept,And, hungry for the old, familiar waysI turned aside and bowed my head and wept.Claude McKay uses metaphors to convey a sense of sadness and nostalgia in “The Tropics of New York.” What metaphor does he use in the poem?The Tropics it is HUNGER
It would be a diamond shape because it can have four sides that are equal but the angles have to be non equal to make it a diamond so a diamond is your answer