To answer this, we can return to the text itself to determine what is the best answer. We can also use historical data to help us understand what a pardoner was. Pardoners were people that sold pardons and indulgences, usually from the Pope. They were considered a part of the clergy, essentially, because of this service.
However, in "The Canterbury Tales," we know that Chaucer upended the societal norms of the people he portrayed. So, while in real life, the pardoner is a good man that sells things for the Pope, in his poem, he is not.
In the General Prologue, the Host determines that the pardoner is not to be trusted because on top of the "pardons" he carries, he also has other things that he has used to trick a parson out of two month's salary.
With this in mind, the best answer to this question is A. Keeping in mind the stereotypes Chaucer played with and the description he gives of the pardoner--mainly that he's shady--it is best to say he sells false relics and pardons to swindle people out of their money.
Answer:
“With one boy in particular my mother had to sit me down and explain.”
Explanation:
Perhaps this one “boy” doesn’t want to be a boy anymore and gets offended when the main character refers to them as a “guy” or was never a guy to begin with. In that case it would make sense that the boy would get offended
I think it is D because if he was just found he was alone
The answer is "She was sick of segregation"
In Montgomery, the capital of Alabama, the first rows of buses were, by law, reserved for white passengers. Behind them were the seats where the blacks could sit. On December 1, 1955, Rosa Parks took one of these buses on her way home from work and sat down at one of the places in the middle of the bus. When the driver-white-demanded that she and three other blacks rise to give way to whites who had entered the bus, Parks refused to comply with the order. She remained seated and was therefore arrested and taken to prison.
Rosa Parks' silent protest against segregation spread rapidly. The Women's Political Council organized a boycott of urban buses as a protest against racial discrimination in the country. Martin Luther King Jr. was one of those who supported the action. Activist and musician Harry Belafonte recalls how his life changed after the day King telephoned him to call for support for the action of the woman who became known as the "mother of civil rights movements" in the United States.