They were of course unhappy with them, since it would mean their economic ruin.
The Bible states that 600,000 Israelite former slaves were brought out of Egypt by Moses (Exodus ch.12). These were men. To that number must be added their wives and children.
Pharaoh and the Egyptians forced their Israelite slaves to produce bricks and to work on various construction projects, such as building cities and monuments. The Israelites were subjected to hard labor and harsh conditions under Pharaoh's rule.
Because the British treated the Indians like slaves
Slavery is an unhappy condition.
Joshua certainly would have believed Moses to be an Israelite, but nobody "alleged" that Moses was an Israelite. Moses was an Israelite because of his ancestry and because of his connection to the people and he believed he was an Israelite.
No. Unhappy is an adjective meaning sad. The adverb form would be unhappily.
The slaves that built Tutankhamun's tomb built it because they believed that Tutakhamun needed to be mummified to get to the afterlife and needed physical space to carry his possessions with him. There is no evidence that the slaves who built the tomb were Jewish/Israelite though.
A:The Bible says that Moses was born after the Israelites became slaves and then lived to 120 years old, but did not begin the Exodus until just 40 years before his death. So, God must have willingly allowed the Israelites to suffer as slaves for more than 80 years and probably much longer. Nevertheless, the Bible also says that God cared about the Israelite slaves. On the other hand, more than ninety per cent of scholars are said to believe that there never was an Exodus from Egypt as described in the Bible. The Israelite nation was never enslaved and therefore God had no need to care about the Israelites.
Happy would be the simplest antonym.
There would be no slaves in the world..dugh
birthday,funderal,and wedding