What can be inferred about how the Maori feel about the land they live on? The Maori feel in control of their land. The Maori feel overwhelmed by their land. The Maori feel afraid of their land. The Maori feel deep affection for their land
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Ответ:
The Maori feel in control of their land.
Explanation:
The myth of the creation of the Maori people in the book "The Maori: Genealogies and Origins in New Zealand" reveals just how these people came to be. Their creation or rather, their evolvement into the human beings they are now is told in this myth.
As given in the excerpt, the importance of the land and their sense of control over it is quite evident in the passage. Especially, when Tû ate his brothers to punish them, he appeared to be the strongest of them all. And his generations who later became the Maori tribe of New Zealand also felt the same sense of strength and ability to overcome others. And the description of these people as "humans who are able to master anything that they decide to conquer: the forest, the sea, the food, and the earth" seems to suggest or support that they feel in control of their land.
Ответ:
C. It reveals that obstacles can be overcome by resilience and determination.
Explanation:
In the frame story, Sindbad is marooned or shipwrecked after he sets sail from Basra with the merchandise. He is able to survive the terrible dangers he encounters by a combination of resourcefulness and luck and returns home with a fortune.
Sindbad's movement from prosperity to loss, experienced during a voyage filled with adventure, and back to prosperity, achieved when he returns home, is repeated in the structure of each tale. The details of the stories of the voyages shed considerable light on seafaring and trade in the East.