It's samba (trust me, I'm Brazilian).
contact with native populations is rarely and even exchange: the native people are usually exploited.
yiddish
the dance spread by the NATIVE AMERICANS
Sligo, Ireland
That is the correct spelling of the name "orangutan," an ape native to Indonesia.
Yes, it is. An endangered species.
yes.
There are two species of Great Apes not native to Africa, Pongo abelii, the Sumatran Orangutan, and Pongo pygmaeus, the Bornean Orangutan, both of which are native to Asia (Sumatra and Borneo).
bananas originated in the Indo-Malaysian region reaching to northern Australia- eliza jones, seventh grade
One theory (although likely spurious) says that the banana was left off because sailors are superstitious about having bananas on their boats, and Fruit of the Loom underwear would be forbidden if there was a banana on the label. The simplest explanation is that the design was originally an apple, and then a classic cornucopia, or "horn of plenty," which until the discovery of the Americas would not have included the banana (native to the New World).
Bananas were native to South East Asia and by 500BC were grown in India. They spread to Madagasgar because of the Arab traders and then to Africa. The Portugese extended the domain of the banana, the first recorded sale in England was 1633. They were very expensive. By the 19th Century they were a popular fruit. Bananas were sold in America in ther 1870's
There are two different species of orangutan. One of them, abelii, is the smaller species that lives in Sumatra and Indonesia. The larger species, pigmaeus, is native to Borneo.
In their native environments, obviously they survive, or there wouldn't be any apples, strawberries or bananas. In many parts of the world you would need to protect them if they are in different climates from their natural climates.
Bananas grow on trees. They are native to tropical regions of Southeast Asia.
A banana bender is a humorous term for a native or inhabitant of Queensland, Australia.
Orangutans and a few types of gibbon and siamangs.