A German General from this time had stumbled upon sugar cane in one of the salt mines of the African villages in Namibia. When he added a concoction of gin and cranberry juice that he was drinking to the said new found component on the ground, he invented the rainbow.
hey ... I'm learning about this in history now...
a positive impact includes trading globally which will lead to new inventions and discovery of new materials
and a negative impact is the European thinking it was their responsibilty and duty to convert everyone to the "right religion and government" so this caused conflicts world wide...
in 1784 the negative effects were the fact that no one could understand the british due to thioer heeavy acent this sucked big time.
than the british left
This is just weird, so I'm answering the point directly.
"No one could understand the British, because of their heavy accent." Do you mean that the British spoke such a peculiar variety of English that the Indians - who could have understood them perfectly otherwise - were stuck? Do you think that all the Indians spoke good American when the British arrived and it was just the British English accent that confused them?
Perhaps you mean that the British spoke the native languages so badly, that the Indians could not understand them? When the British first arrived, I've no doubt that they did not understand many of the Indians to whom they spoke, until some people learned to use both languages. But the Indians did not speak "Indian". Even today there are some 400+ languages in India, and someone who could speak Punjabi might have been no help down in the South, scholars who came to learn Sanskrit (and there was a steady flow of academics studying Indian languages) would be no use in the slums of Calcutta.
After a while some British people became very fluent in one or more Indian language. some Indians came to speak and understand English very well.
Not being able to converse with your neighbours is a bad idea - but how many "stay at home" English speakers can make themselves understood, or comprehend what is being said to them in French or German?
One more point, you say, "In 1784 ... this sucked big time. ... The the British left."
It should be pointed out that the British left in 1948, nearly 200 years later.
no one knows asswholes do you work and you uhh find out!
There were many positive and negative effects on the people in South Africa because of the missionaries from Europe. The fact that many South Africans were taught to read the Bible can be both a positive and negative effect depending on the person you talk to.
what are the positive effects of socialism in south Africa politics
Nothing
It was both
it had its roots in european imperialism in africa
There weren't any.
One of the positive effects of European colonialism of Africa is that introduced efficient system of administration. They brought the industrial technology wit them which helped in the industrialization of many of the African countries.
There were many positive and negative effects on the people in South Africa because of the missionaries from Europe. The fact that many South Africans were taught to read the Bible can be both a positive and negative effect depending on the person you talk to.
The westernization cultural is both an encouragement and a degradation. There are areas in this world like Africa where westernization has had many positive effects than the negative effects.
what are the positive effects of socialism in south Africa politics
Nothing
It was both
The positive affects in South Africa is that it will have many tourists.
Had man Orgies with elephants and giraffes. Even with lions this was only done with Real MEN WITH BIG ======> PEN15
While there are definitely a number of negatives to colonialism, there were most certainly a number of positives as well, many of which survive in one form or another today: Architecture Infrastructure (Road, rail, bridges, electricity, water supply and power generation) Administration and legal systems Education (Starting with missionary schools up to universities) Medicine Military infrastructures and training Farming, Agriculture, food and textile production
deaf supporters
There aren't any.