Answer:
Society and Class is one of the themes of Don Quixote.
Explanation:
There are many themes in the "Don Quixote" by "Miguel de Cervantes" like Social and class, madness, loyalty, race, madness, morality.
Cervantes's novel shows the difference between the class of a person and his worth. In Don Quixote, Cervantes argues the traditional thinking that if a person is an aristocrat, he is respectable and noble. But Duke and Duches are frivolous and unkind though they are aristocrats in the story. On the other hand, though Sancho has low social status and is a farmer, he is wise and thoughtful.
In Don Quixote, two people who love each other are asked to live apart apart because of their social class and Cervantes also suggests that quality of a person is more important than his social class.
Answer:
The stars represent fate, and a romeo is challenging fate’s apparent decree.
Explanation:
First of all, the other answers are very literal and that’s not what english class is about. Second, in Romeo and Juliet, everything is trying to keep them apart. There is distance between them and their families are holding them back from one another. It seems like fpthere have been many obstacles put by fate, trying to show them that they shouldn’t be together. but since romeo loves juliet so passionately, he’s telling the stars, which represent fate, that he’ll defy them. the reason the stars represent fate is because of the phrase that goes “it was written in the stars.”
Maybe. Some schools already have a family studies program where one can participate and learn about home studies eg. learning how to cook and do the laundry and at the end of the course the find themselves unsatisfied with the curriculum. You could argue that having someone who is educated in said topic would be more intriguing for students but that would also disrupt budgets for something that wouldn’t include as many students and lets say spending that money on school trip or activities. Others also will argue that students should be focused on their future and be succeeding in maths or sciences rather than learning how to stay at home and cook
“The hungry wolves” is most likely used metaphorically for
people who had ill wishes towards the pilgrim. Thinking in this line, the
speaker intends to imply that these people may have snapped at the pilgrim’s heels
at the slightest incitement or may even have attacked him in packs. But now
that the pilgrim has been taken by death, it is no longer possible for these
wolves to harm him.