Question

"From a Native Daughter," Haunani-Kay Trask
Trask describes her experiences of growing up and learning about Hawaiian history from two sources. Her family described the ""life of the old ones'" " how they planted, fished, danced and chanted. The second source, textbooks, described a very different Hawaii " ""Pagan Hawaiians'" could not read or write and were ""lustful cannibals."" Trask is troubled by how native language has been suppressed by school knowledge. She concludes that historians had never learned the language of the Hawaiian people. Therefore, the story of Hawaii, its culture and connection to the land remains unwritten.
The Hawaiian language shows possession in two ways: through the use of an "a" possessive, which indicates , and through the use of an "o" possessive which denotes:
a. civilized status; less developed status
b. inherent status; acquired status
c. acquired status; inherent status
d. less developed status; civilized status

Answer

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