Answer:
Chaucher's 'Wife of Bath Tale' challenges the gender stereotypes.
Explanation:
The Wife of a Bath’s Tale is amongst one of Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales. This tale is based upon gender roles, love, marriage, and human desire.
In this tale, Chaucer have challenged the gender stereotypes and this could be concluded from some of the following incidences from the novel. Firstly, according to ancient thinking, a man can marry more than one woman but woman cannot. But this his tale we can see how the wife already had three marriages and was looking forward for another marriage.
Chaucher’s wife is seen as defending the age old norms of being a typical wife and she comes up with her own modern perspectives towards marriage and sex.
Can you be more specific with your question I don’t think we understand
1 is correct
2 is c
3 is b
Also I can't read the paragraphs but you misspelled brought it is not bringed.
Answer: A. single-minded.
In <em>MobyDick</em>, we meet Ahab. He is a captain obsessed with killing MobyDick, a great whale. Ahab's speeches are often long-winded and tormented, and his obsession is obvious. He is single-minded, and believes that it is his destiny to kill the whale, which is the embodiment of evil in the world. He is a tragic character, because his overconfidence leads him to defy common sense and expose himself to great tragedy.