<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.
Answer:
A
Explanation:
The fragment part of A is the first part. While this may look like a sentence and may also transmit the same ideas as would a properly formed sentence, this is a fragment.
A sentences fragment is not a sentence because it is not an independent clause containing a subject and a predicate. In order to be a sentence, the fragment would need to be changed to something like the following:
He was a child who grew up in the New Jersey suburbs in the fifties.
Answer:
c major
Explanation:
no sharps or flats in the key signature and it starts and ends on c