I think that they describe him as a lone hunter who falls in love with Pocahontas
I was happy to unburthen the heavy load of groceries from my hands.
i expounded my opinion on the matter.
the fashion style baroque is very ornate.
i conducted rigorous research on the civil war
he had a hard time understanding which made him nervous about his inscrutability
she swooned after she saw the blood
i was stupefied at the scene
some dogs have docility some dont
she had a very sagacious look on her face
she tinctured the box
Hi there!
The statement that best describes the satire in the excerpt from The Canterbury Tales is that Chaucer criticizes the idea that forgiveness is available for purchase.
In pieces of literature, performing arts or dances, satire is a genre that is used to ridicule or shame someone through wittiness and in form of humour. Satire is usually meant to be humorous.
This can be seen in the excerpt with: “All for a penny! Out now with your purse!” <em>Chaucer expresses humorously what he thinks about churches. </em>
Hope this helps!
A.its should be the correct answer because it’s is the short form of it is.
Malvolio's fate does seem fair, because it was his own insistence on fighting that got him killed. Tybalt had no intention of fighting him, only Romeo and Romeo refused the challenge. Mercutio's embarrassment for Romeo's "cowardice" and need to constantly be fighting is what accelerated the fight and it's why he died. Shakespeare included him in the play though, for comedic relief through the first half and then to incite the punishment of banishment in the fight scene so that the ending could happen.