World Languages, asked by akasharjun12, 1 year ago

In ancient Egypt, pyramid workers would say “gengro yatju” when wishing other pyramid workers “good building”. Upon the pyramid workers’ return, the children would ask “Ern yatju gengro?”, which meant “Was building good”? The pyramid workers would either reply “Ern gengro” (“Was good building”) or “Ern gangro yatju!”

If gangro symbolises the opposite of gengro, what does “Ern gangro pohim” mean?

A: was bad building B: was hard building C: was fun building D: was cold building E: was happy building


Please someone answer this as quickly as possible...

Answers

Answered by Narutsu
9

Answer should be A. Was bad building

Answered by arshaarunsl
1

Answer:

“Ern gangro pohim” mean-was bad building

Explanation:

Given:

  • gengro yatju-good building
  • Ern yatju gengro-Was building good

To find:

Ern gangro pohim

Solution:

gengro-good

yatju-building

Ern-Was

gangro-bad(opposite of gengro)

Final answer:

“Ern gangro pohim” mean-was bad building

Egypt's people

The pyramids were constructed by the Egyptians. All the evidence points to a dating of the Great Pyramid to 4,600 years ago, during Khufu's reign. There are 104 superstructured pyramids in Egypt, including the Great Pyramid of Khufu.

Royal graves were carved into rock and covered with flat-roofed rectangular constructions known as "mastabas," which were forerunners of the pyramids, starting in the Dynastic Era (2950 B.C.). For King Djoser of the third dynasty, the earliest pyramid in Egypt is the one at Saqqara, which was constructed approximately 2630 B.C.

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