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:
They disike him because he is better than them
Explanation:
Answer:
Sure and thanks for inviting us
Explanation:
but I’m not in your school or in your school district or in the same state you in.
He disguised himself as a groom
Answer:
D. his effectiveness in drawing charts.
Explanation:
Walter Dean Myers' "Into the Unknown," tells the story of James Cook and how he became an important asset for England and her territorial expansion. The short story narrates the growth of Cook and how he got involved in cartography and expeditions.
Lines 46 through 53 talk about the increased popularity of James Cook whose <em>"calculations were so well done, and so well thought out, that his reputation grew quickly." </em>He also successfully drew the chart of the Canadian border, later on, the astronomy of Venus.
Thus, the correct answer is option D.