The correct answers are options B and D. In the Igbo clan in Africa, the efulufus were considered as worthless, empty men. They were the first converts among the outcasts attracted to Christianity.
In the Igbo tribes, there were some outcasts like twins, some of whom were killed at birht and also people with terrible diseases like leprosy who were abandoned and casted out of the villages. They were mistreated and left aside.
In consequence, during the early Christianization of Igboland by the white Europeans, the new faith attracted the outcasts of the clans as they found that the new religion welcomed twins and people who were in the margins of community.
The efulufu were the first to embrace all the aspects of Western education and, ironically, became the ruling class of civil servants and administrators in colonial and postcolonial Eastern Nigeria. Not only efulufus left their own people's traditions and religion to join Europeans, but also fought on the side of the imperial power against their own Igbo people.
You got protagonist and antagonist mixed up. The antagonist is a person, group of people, or a force that opposes or dislikes the main character. The protagonist is the leading character in the story and is usually good. So the antagonist would be the bad guy and the protagonist would be the hero of a story.
<span>"He had come forth from the hands of God a perfect creature, happy and prosperous, guarded by the especial care of his Creator." => Adam. Adam is God's special creature, created with utmost care and love, a perfect being that was supposed to rule the Earth and be happy. His tasting of the forbidden fruit brought an end to his happiness and signaled a beginning of toil.
</span>"like him, when I viewed the bliss of my protectors, the bitter gall of envy rose within me." => Satan. One of Satan's crucial features, which ultimately resulted in his banishment, is his envy upon all God's angels and God himself.
<span>"A new species would bless me as its creator and source; many happy and excellent natures would owe their being to me." </span>=> God. He is the only creator and source of everything.
<span>This is important
to keep the essay on the main idea. Sentence structures could be simple (one
independent clause), compound (two independent clause with coordinating
conjunction), complex (a subordinate & independent clause) and
compound-complex sentences (subordinate & two independent clause). These
include clauses, conjunctions, coherence and balance and even to the number of
words you use in your subject and predicate. You must also see to it that when
you do parallelism, your sentences still makes sense. The answer is <span>B. By joining
two simple sentences with a comma and a coordinate conjunction </span></span>