Red lion wenatchee
Welcome to the red lion wenatchee land
Welcome to the red lion wenatchee land. Here you can find more information about animals.
You can also ask questions about red lion wenatchees. There are a close relation between
red lion wenatchees and human. According to the evolution theory, human was evolved from
red lion wenatchees. Of course it is a long history.
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Bears are almost the strongest animal on the land. Polar bears eat fish. Other bears eat animals. Bears can eat human. There are a lot of stories about fights between bears and human. Actually, more bears were hurt than human in the fights.
And they shall take away the ashes from the altar, and spread a purple cloth thereon:
But they shall not go in to see when the holy things are covered, lest they die.
Lion is the king of the grassland. Lion statues are popular in a lot of countries. There are usually a pair of lions in front of the gate of a building in ancient China. These lions are the guards of the door.
Animals give us so much fun. There is a close relation between animals and human. We actually eat animal meat everyday. A lot of clothe we are wearing is made more or less by some kind of animal fur. Animals are also good companies. Many people have dogs or cats. They make our life full of fun and joy.
And they shall take a cloth of blue, and cover the candlestick of the light, and his lamps, and his tongs, and his snuffdishes, and all the oil vessels thereof, wherewith they minister unto it:
Butterfly is a symbol of love. There is a legend in China. A woman named Zhu, Yingtai was in love with a man names Liang, Shanbo. The man go to the woman's home asking for marriage but he was refused by the woman's parents because he is not in an eminence family. The man loved the woman so much that the man even dies because of that.
And they shall put upon it all the vessels thereof, wherewith they minister about it, even the censers, the fleshhooks, and the shovels, and the basons, all the vessels of the altar; and they shall spread upon it a covering of badgers' skins, and put to the staves of it.
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