A coffle is the term used to describe animals or slaves chained up together. In a slave coffle, the slaves did nothing without the approval of their owner. They were often not allowed to talk and had their hands and feet bound to keep them from escaping.
A coffle is essentially the name used to describe a group of slaves chained up together. In a coffle, slaves were not allowed to talk or move unless they were told by their owner.
a Slave coffle was almost like a hand cuff, but instead of putting it around your hands it was used around there necks, so that the slave could not escape or break loose and run away A Barracoon is where a slave stayed to await there transportation across the Atlantic ocean. this simplified the traders work by keeping the slave alive and in captivity
The noun clause is 'what happened next' which is functioning as the object of the preposition 'at'.
Is there a war?
people were tested
iduno
The man made a coffle of all his dogs on the path. This is an example of coffle in sentence.
A coffle is a group of slaves chained together.
In a coffle, animals or slaves are chained together and are forced to walk in a line. In a coffle of slaves, they're often not allowed to talk and must have their hands bound. A coffle is more commonly seen in many pictures of slaves during the early years of the United states.
made out of slaves
group of animals, prisoners, or slaves chained together in a line.
A coffle: a group of slaves transported together for sale
A Slave Coffle is someone who sees over slaves yet still is a slave. Usually conducted transportation and stuff.
Usually referred to as a herd. When the asses are in a line, roped together they can be referred to as coffle. Lesser used term: "pace".
a Slave coffle was almost like a hand cuff, but instead of putting it around your hands it was used around there necks, so that the slave could not escape or break loose and run away A Barracoon is where a slave stayed to await there transportation across the Atlantic ocean. this simplified the traders work by keeping the slave alive and in captivity
No, the noun 'slavery' is an uncountable, common, abstract noun; a word for condition in which one person is owned as property by another; involuntary servitude; excessive dependence on or devotion to someone or something; a word for a thing.The noun 'slavery' is not a collective noun. A collective noun is a word used to group people or things in a descriptive way; for example a coffle of slaves.
Something that was assumed to have happened, but not proven.Something that was assumed to have happened, but not proven.Something that was assumed to have happened, but not proven.Something that was assumed to have happened, but not proven.Something that was assumed to have happened, but not proven.Something that was assumed to have happened, but not proven.
Collective nouns for slaves are a gang of slaves or a coffle of slaves.