Some African Americans use handmade, African mkekas. Some people weave their own mkekas at home. The mkeka is a very important symbol of Kwanzaa because all of the other holiday symbols rest upon it.
Lord Derby growled,—growling especially at Mr. [William Ewart] Gladstone,—and the Archbishop of Canterbury growled, and the Bishop of Oxford growled, and the Marquis of Bath (a good Conservative) growled, but he (the Marquis) growled at the Government rather than at the Bill.
The term cobber … is still a part of our linguistic culture, and mateship is still a part of our cultural mythos.
[…] and not of men only but of women and the same not only learned but labouring men, sewsters, servants, and handmaids.
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