Many people who would have traveled by land found a very efficient way to travel: it was fast provided a short cut to various places................in short it helped all of China
The Chinese junk ship was used by the Chinese and Asian traders for centuries to navigate the seas and conduct maritime trade. Its design and construction influenced other cultures in Asia, including the Malay and Indonesian archipelagos, who also adopted similar sailing vessels for their own trade and fishing activities.
Chinese junks are ancient sailing ships used in East Asia for trade and travel. They have distinctive sails and design features, such as a flat bottom and a rudder that can be raised. Chinese junks were known for their seaworthiness and were widely used in maritime trade until the 20th century.
"Junk" can be a noun (e.g., "He threw away the junk") or a verb (e.g., "He junked his old car").
Yes, typically a comma is used after "as a result" when it is used to introduce a cause-and-effect relationship in a sentence. For example, "She studied hard, and as a result, she passed the exam."
The homophone for sheep is "shear."
Detritus.
A junk is a Chinese sailing ship.
A junk is a van. A Chinese junk is a Chinese sailing ship built from an ancient design and it is still in use today.
a junk is a van A Chinese Junk is a Chinese sailing ship built from an ancient design and still in use today.
That would be the famous Chinese junk.
THats what the ming dynasty named it
A boat that begins with the letter K is a kyak.
junk (ancient Chinese ship)
The Chinese junk was used to carry people and cargo so they could trade. Some used it to go on long sea voyages.
junk
a Chinese junk
junk
Refuse, clutter, scrap, mess, Chinese sailing ship, valuable recyclable materials, worthless stuff, rubbish, and discards, all decribe 'junk'.