Answer:
flood or tsunamy ) i know only this
Answer:
In "A Wolf and Little Daughter,"
the author builds suspense by having the wolf repeatedly appear and disappear. Each time he reappears, the wolf is closer to the girl and she is closer to getting home safely, which makes the suspense grow because her chances of getting away safely seem to grow as she gets closer to the gate and decrease as the wolf gets closer to her.
Explanation:
I just did it.
Answer: Mary absolutely is astonished and happy to have something all to herself, and that only she knows about it.
In Chaucer's "The Canterbury Tales" the reader is introduced to the Pardoner in "the Pardoner's Tale". What is ironic about the Pardoner is that he would often preach that money was the root of all evil, but then he would sell pardons (official documents that pardoned sins).