Spanish-speaking peon laborers from Venezuela arrived in the nineteenth century to clear forests and work in cocoa cultivation. |
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She was a smart mechanic, but she was still a mere peon to the vassal that owned her. |
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Tomas Milian would appear in many of these Zapata westerns, always as a peon, a Mexican farmer turned revolutionary. |
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Thus the Southern peon is not, in fact, and as an individual, as irrevocably bound to the wheel of industry as his Northern brother, since he may always escape to churldom. |
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The debt peon had to work for his creditor, and the labour of the criminal peon was sold by the state to a third party. |
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We are informing the public, the Chilean Parliament and the Government that from this day on we will mobilise to prevent Chile from becoming another peon of Monsanto. |
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The once free-spirited gaucho thus became a farmhand or peon. |
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In both the English and Spanish languages, the word peon became synonymous with labourer but was restricted in the United States to those workers compelled by contract to pay their creditors in labour. |
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But in short, it is this way the politics to the Mexican, and in the dark board of political chess it already advanced the first two squares to the front the first white peon. |
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