Answer:
The question is incomplete but I will do my best to guide you in writing an informal letter.
Explanation:
An informal letter is the type of letter that is written to a friend, colleague or family member. It is written in a friendly tone since the writer and the receiver are well acquainted with each other.
An informal letter begins with an address. This is usually the address of the writer. This is now followed by the date on which the letter was written. Next comes the greeting. It is usually a friendly salutation such as; Dear Jude, Dear Anthony etc.
The introductory paragraph usually carries the greeting and pleasantries of the writer. Sometimes, the writer even makes reference to a previous correspondence between the duo.
The body of the letter contains paragraphs in which the writer expresses the reason for writing the letter. This is where the message is passed from writer to recipient.
The closing of the letter is usually some kind of friendly remark such as; Yours sincerely, Yours truly, Yours affectionately etc. This is followed by the name by which the recipient knows the writer.
Answer:
B
Explanation:
The answer could either be B or D, mostly B, because they can happen any time, any age, towards anyone.
D, also true because after an identity crisis, things, mostly the way one thinks, changes.
In Seamus Heaney translation of Beowulf into Modern English, he writes...
But the earl-troop's leader was not inclined
To allow his caller to depart alive:
He did not consider that life of much account
To anyone anywhere. Time and again,
Beowulf's warriors worked to defend
Their lord's life, laying about them
As best they could with their ancestral blades.
Lines 789-795.
The kenning used to describe Beowulf is translated as "earl-troop's leader". And it emphasizes his noble rank, as the word "earl" originally denoted a man of hereditary noble rank (as opposed to a thane), who was the leader of the warriors who were fighting the monster.
On the other hand the kenning used to refer to his demon opponent is translated by Haney as "his caller".
Answer: The Pardoner says to the pilgrims that by these tricks he has acquired a considerable sum of money. He goes on to relate how he stands like a clergy at the pulpit, and preaches against avarice but to gain the congregation's money; he doesn't care for the correction of sin or for their souls.
Explanation: The Pardoner's Tale. ... The cynical Pardoner explains in a witty prologue that he sells indulgences—ecclesiastical pardons of sins—and admits that he preaches against avarice although he practices it himself. His tale relates how three drunken revelers set out to destroy Death after one of their friends had died.