Answer:
The narrator in Geoffrey Chaucer's "THE CANTERBURY TALES" joins twenty-eight pilgrims in order to make the account of the incident look more real.
Explanation:
Geoffrey Chaucer is considered <em>The Father English Poetry</em> and similarly he is first realist of English literature. By making the narrator join the twenty-eight pilgrims at the inn, Chaucer make sure that his poetry be considered realistic. The narrator himself becomes a character who is not free of biases and his own prejudices.
Motion energy is stored in the movement of objects and electric energy is delivered by tiny charged particles called electrons.
yes you are in favor of
because
1.community service would look good on college application
2.college admissions often can count community service as an extracurricular activity
3.people feel that like military service there should be a community service corps because like the miltary service, community service can help a nation
4.npr said a person who finishes military bootcamp can do the peace corps instead joining the military. peace corps is community service in other countries. if our country feels this strongly about community elsewhere then some kind of community service is probably deemed important here
5.its what you do with the experience: much career based knowledge can be learned in community and it is the job of the school to teach career skills like math and science. community service can go along side this. possible careers could be social work and politics
6. word community is in community service. this is a way you can help your own community or an underserved community
Answer: D. the blending of pagan and Christian traditions.
Explanation:
<em>Beowulf </em>is a famous Old English Epic poem, and also the longest preserved Old English poem. It tells a story about a Geatish hero called Beowulf, and his fight against the monster, Grendel, and his mother.
Throughout this poem, there is a mixture of pagan elements such as fate, pride, and revenge and Christian faith. There are many references to the Bible and God. This mixture is not unusual, because the Anglo-Saxons practiced paganism until they converted to Christianity in the seventh century.