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  1. The Verb To Be. Probably the best known verb in the world: "To be or not to be..." Normally we use the verb to be to show the status or characteristics of something or someone (as a stative verb). It says what I am, what you are or what something is.

  2. With Joe Allie, Lucy Amara, Cuco Casanova, Emma Christopher. Afro-Cubans preserve ancestral traditions. A filmmaker traces roots to Sierra Leone, where villagers recognize lost kin's customs. A joyous festival reunites the long-separated family through shared cultural heritage.

    • (35)
    • Documentary, History
    • Emma Christopher
    • 2016-02-12
  3. We use they and them to refer back to the indefinite pronouns someone, anyone, everyone (underlined below) when we do not know the number or gender. We also use they and them in question tags: If someone comes with a parcel for me, can you ask them to take it next door.

  4. THEY ARE WE Trailer. Icarus Films. 7.77K subscribers. Subscribed. 30. 1.6K views 8 years ago. A film by Emma Christopher, Ph.D. / An Icarus Films Release / Official Film, United Nations...

    • 1 min
    • 2002
    • Icarus Films
  5. Find out how and where to watch "They Are We" online on Netflix, Prime Video, and Disney+ today – including 4K and free options.

  6. Jan 2, 2014 · The story of an Afro-Cuban group who kept alive songs and dances their ancestor had brought aboard the slave ship from Africa. They were so specific that around 200 years later, a village of Africans watched them, joined in singing, and said simply, joyously: "They Are We".

  7. THEY ARE WE is the story of a remarkable reunion, 170 or so years after a family was driven apart by the ravages of the transatlantic slave trade. In Central Cuba, proud members of the Ganga-Longoba, a small Afro-Cuban ethnic group, have kept their unique heritage alive.