The crew of the ship exchanged a significant amount of gold and silver with the Portuguese captain for their freedom. This valuable trade served as a means to secure their release and return home, highlighting the importance of wealth in negotiations during that period. Additionally, it underscored the desperate situation the crew found themselves in and their willingness to sacrifice their riches for liberty.
No, I am not totally sure on this but it is only a spainard, hispanic thing.
For the British, yes. For the aboriginals, not so much.
it is the best thing that here in the world ! ^_^ it gave us a freedom for all
freedom of speech can sometimes allow people to express their views that others may consider to be offensive or provocative and incite violence or unrest.
Yes, but probably for all the wrong reasons. It was not just freedom that was wanted, it was also the freedom to own slaves and to establish the southern plantation lifestyle that they had been forced to leave behind. It was not freedom of religion that they sought, it was freedom from the Catholic religion.
Crusoe gave the captain a small boat. Crusoe traded Xury as a slave. --- APEX
Yes, freedom is a thing; freedom is an abstract noun.
coisa linda
A coisa. (but if you mean "that thing" is "aquela coisa". And if it was "another thing", then is "outra coisa").
The thing about any captain is that they do not steer the wheel. They must retain situational awareness at all times.
There is no such thing as "actual freedom."
No. In fact, there is no such thing as a broken language.
yes
Igoogle.com.. Then find the translator. Easiest Thing in the world(;
The 'thing' you use is the suffix 'dom'.
No, the word 'freedom' is a noun; a word for personal liberty; a word for a thing.
The bird of paradise represents political freedom and personal freedom, freedom and independance mean basically the same thing in this context)