<u>Answer</u>:
The excerpt satirize the Church (A) by exaggerating the greedy nature of the clergy
<u>Explanation</u>:
In “The Canterbury Tales” by “Chaucer”, the author depicts that all the clergy men, spiritual leaders in a church, are all corrupt people. He creates a satire on many characters from various professions and people from different classes.
Specifically, in a church, he criticizes that even forgiveness is available for purchase. Also, in church clergy men deceive people by asking them to buy the holy artifacts. This is cheating and is even morally wrong. Thus, Chaucer satirize the church by exaggerating the greedy nature of the clergy men.
Answer:
C
Explanation:
Why can't you think about someone else? is defensive, because you're finding something wrong with someone else. You never listen is the same, and so is you always do this.
I would love to talk about this is when you aren't just caring about yourself, or what someone else is doing wrong.
Answer: The second choice.
Explanation:
The simile implies that the two men are poorly kept and dirty from the use of "ragged." "Rags" is defined as "a torn piece of cloth worn from use" usually used to describe the state of someone who is not wealthy who doesn't have expensive or even decent clothes to wear.
Logos in literature are rhetorical or persuasive appeal to the audiences logic and rationality.