they only harvest the so called "women" crops, those are coco yams, beans , and casbah
A wife is not the same as one's mother.
The prestigious architecture qualifications are awards giving to living things. Printer is not given to women.
Yes, Igbo women had legal rights. This is shown in the first court case, when the woman who was regularly beat ran away from her husband.
The Christian women are forbidden to go to the stream, to the red-earth pit, or to the chalk quarry as well as the markets.
No
Explain how the nazi attitude toward women changed over the course of world war 2?
get what u want, then leave
The narrator in the tale excuses himself from having the same attitude toward women by claiming that he has learned to respect and value women as individuals. He emphasizes that he has changed his perspective and no longer sees women as possessions or objects to be controlled.
Jesus did not have problems with women and treated them equal as the same with Paul. He also had no problems with women and appointed some of them in the cause.
Swift's poem depicts a negative attitude towards women because it describes a aversion to women's bodies
MARYLIN B. ARTHUR has written: 'EARLY GREECE : THE ORIGINS OF THE WESTERN ATTITUDE TOWARD WOMEN'
Tom Buchanan views women as objects to possess and control, while George Wilson is more submissive and loyal to his wife, Myrtle. Tom's attitude is characterized by entitlement and disregard for women's autonomy, while George's attitude is marked by devotion and dependence.
She refutes his objections to her lack of gentility, her poverty, her age and ugliness. She reminds him that she saved his life.
Gulliver marries primarily for financial stability and societal expectations rather than for love or companionship. This reflects his pragmatic approach to relationships and suggests that he sees marriage more as a social contract than a romantic union. Overall, Gulliver's attitude toward women appears to be utilitarian and lacks emotional depth.
The Church's view of women was extraordinary and completely counter-cultural at the time of the establishment of the Church. Women were held in the highest regard and it can safely be said that the status of modern women is due in no small part to the Church and its exaltation of women and putting them on an identical level with men before God.
Blanche Hinman Dow has written: 'The varying attitude toward women in French literature of the fifteenth century' -- subject(s): French literature, History and criticism, Women in literature