Answer:
i used to but then i forgot the story
Explanation:
This question refers to the Monk in "The Canterbury Tales". The fact that the Monk tells story after story, all with the same moral, means that he is a simple man, who perceives the world in absolute and simplistic ways.
- The Monk is a part of "<u>The Canterbury Tales,</u>" which contains 24 stories by British author Geoffrey Chaucer (1343-1400).
- Among the several characters, the Monk tells different stories with the same moral.
- All of his stories aim to show characters<u> falling from Grace</u>, that is, going from a high position to a low one.
- His purpose, through his tragic stories, is <u>to warn people against trusting wealth and prosperity</u>. Reality can change, and one can go from having everything to having nothing.
- The fact that the monk teaches only the same moral reveals that he is a simple man. His view of the world is also simplistic, and he seems to believe in absolute truths.
Learn more about the book here:
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B, the best way to ensure equality is to make everyone the same.
There were opening announcements made at the beginning of the radio adaptation of H.G. Wells’s <em>The War of the Worlds,</em> but what they did not anticipate is that the listeners who tuned in half-way through the radio play would have no idea that it was only a dramatization and would believe the news-like structure which understandably caused them distress.
The production team made lots of revisions, slowing down the pace of the first act, deleting some crucial scenes that would be tell-tale signs of a fictional work, and all this contributed to panic that ensued. The following day, there was a press conference held to clear all of it up.
I believe the correct answer is sentences 2,5 and 6.
Complex sentences are composed of one independent
clause and at least one dependent clause. The examples from "The Enigma
Machine” which are complex sentences are:
<span>2. </span>For
example, Bletchley Park was crucial in the Battle of the Atlantic, which lasted
six years.
5. This
was provided in a codebook, which was a monthly list of daily keys distributed
to various networks in the German military.
6. Since
the Enigma machine could encrypt text into over 150 trillion possible
combinations, Germans were convinced the codes were not decipherable.