This question is missing the options. I have found the complete question online. Since the passage is the same, I will omit it:
How does Chaucer characterize the young man speaking in this passage?
A. as uncomfortable
B. as loyal
C. as deceitful
D. as innocent
Answer:
Chaucer characterizes the young man:
C. as deceitful
Explanation:
When we call someone deceitful, we mean that person is false, untruthful, untrustworthy. Notice that Chaucer shows the young man is deceitful through the character's own words. He knows he is supposed to split the gold between the three of them. However, once the youngest is gone to town, he proposes to the other man that they split it only between the two of them. He clearly cannot be trusted. Therefore, letter C is the best option for this question.
Answer:
This poem depicts the poet's attempt to motivate himself when their is no hope at all, when the poet writes this poem he has already lost one of his legs. So, in such a situation of mental and physical agony, the poet tries to lift up his courage.
If the title is "After Hours in Kindergarten" then the theme is about what goes on in a kindergarten's experience while in school. It provides the theme and tells you what you’ll be reading about.
In part two of Trifles, the statement that best supports the feminist theme that women often found it difficult to fulfill their own heart’s desires is that (B) the implication that a young Mrs. Peters was discouraged from saving her childhood pet from a vicious little boy.
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Answer: She became famous by marrying Percy Bysshe Shelley, and is known for her novel, Frankenstein.
Explanation:
Mary Shelley (1797-1851) was an English novelist.
In 1814, Shelley began a relationship with one of her father's political partners, Percy Bysshe Shelley. He was one of the most distinguished English Romantic poets. The two of them got married in 1816, and their marriage lasted until 1822. Mary is also known for her gothic fiction book, Frankenstein. She did write several other books (<em>Valperga, The Last Man, the </em>autobiographical <em>Lodore</em>, etc).