From your choices, the answer to your question that is Which person was NOT on the pilgrimage in the Prologue to The Canterbury Tales? Is the Reeve. The second option is the best and most correct answer to your question because the other options were on the pilgrimage in the story.
Answer:
The present perfect tense is used when talking about experiences from the past, a change or a situation that has happened in the past but is still continuing today.
Explanation:
Answer:
As a spy in Normandy, Baissac performed a variety of important and sometimes dangerous tasks in order to get in the way of German troops.
Explanation:
When working with resistance organizations, Baissac attempted to obstruct the passage of German troops. When Baissac lived in Normandy, she sometimes rode her bicycle to carry out spy missions.
Answer:
One of the Moral lessons in this story is that experiences can change people. for instance the change of Mally's character. Also people have to put aside conflict and differences and trust each other.
Explanation:
The Tringo's and Gullivers families are always at conflict over the Authority of seaweed in a cove, Mally and Barty always compete over the seaweed. but when Barty fell into a waterhole, and Mally risking her own life to save him despite their differences, she discovered in his unconscious state that she loved him. at this point she experiences a transformation, she initially despised Barty but now she battles with her inner feelings in order to not despise him anymore.
Barty's parents accused Mally of murdering their son when he was still lying unconscious, but Barty later woke up and everything was revealed and both lived happily ever after.