Answer:
His mother was what he describes as a "pan-African hippie type of woman who marched in the streets" and named him Baratunde as a way to "get back to Africa."
I'm not sure if you meant "The boys are pulling the rope" or "The boy is pulling the rope" but the answer is either "The rope is being pulled by the boys" or "The rope is being pulled by the boy" respectively.
Your questions is not so clear, but I will try to answer it as I understand it.
I am a native Spanish speaker so you can trust my answer, if there is a problem with it, it is due the missing information in the question, but I think we can work it out for the best.
In Spanish when you want to make any negative setence in any tense we do not use an auxliliary verb as you do in English, we simply add the word:
No before the verb, for example in:
Yo no <u>quería</u> bailar en la fiesta. (I didn´t <u>wan</u>t to dance at the party)
Mi hermana no <u>piensa</u> antes de hablar. (My sister doesn't <u>think</u> before talking)
No me <u>hables</u>, no <u>quiero</u> nada. (Don't <u>talk</u> to me, I <u>want</u> nothing)
In Spanish we Simply use the Negative Adverb:
No
Answer:
Educating girls saves lives and builds stronger families, communities and economies. An educated female population increases a country's productivity and fuels economic growth. Some countries lose more than $1 billion a year by failing to educate girls to the same level as boys.
Explanation:
#grlpwr :)