<em>The Canterbury tale by Geoffrey Chaucer,</em> what the reader infer about the Friar through the following lines is that he will use people for money. Like the prioress and the monk, Friar too fails to establish any of the expected virtues. He arranged marriages by sounding generous because the young women are his mistresses and moreover pregnant.
Further, he injects money through committing the sin of selling "forgiveness' which is supposed to be freely given. Moreover, he kept no acquaintance with the sick or poor. He was a corrupt person, for the private gains he destroys the base of faith in people which was his duty to serve.
The singular noun in this sentence would be the word "Sand" because it's talking about the "Hot sand".
He walked across the hot "sand", hot is used to describe the word sand.
Thus your answer.... B. sand.
Hope this helps. :)
True, because the ones with special arrangements are difficult to trace with the eye.
If you need to know how many she had left then... 2/5 x 1/3 = 6/15. Sorry if I came out rude, but I hope I helped! Let me know if you need anything else!
I think it’s irony because the device writer id using