In Chapter 8 of Miguel de Cervantes' Don Quixote, Sancho Panza and Don Quixote come across a field of windmills. Don Quixote is convinced that the windmills are giants although Sancho tells him otherwise. He then goes off to fight the so-called 'giants' and inevitably gets beaten. The main conclusion Don Quixote draws after retreating from his attack on the 'giants' is that <span>that he can blame a magician for altering his chances for defeating the giants in a skirmish. In the end, he still thought that a magician was playing tricks on him - turning the giants into windmills in order for him to lose. </span>
Answer:
Explanation: Get the product of roots with the index to equal the root of the product, calculate the product, and simplify the radical expression
Equation:
Answer:
Personally, I'm leaning B
Explanation:
"The Calling" could refer to an epiphany one experiences, i.e. a sense someone feels or a philosophical/psychological realization.
They are close friends in the beginning of the play. http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:yDbvfIrZYaAJ:www.studynotes.ie/wiki/macbeth-ban...