He won't admit that he was the one who got her hooked on the donkey. When titania's head gets changed into that of a donkey during play practice, Oberon turns him into the play's biggest comedy.
Oberon claims that his pals have fled from him in terror because they are trying to "make a donkey" out of him, unaware that he has changed. (Yes, that is a clear instance of dramatic irony.
More on this is covered in "Symbolism, Imagery, and Allegory." Shakespeare most likely took inspiration from Apuleius's Golden Donkey, a funny tale from the time of the Roman Empire about a man who is transformed into a donkey.
Learn more about Shakespeare
brainly.com/question/7592021
#SPJ4
My guess would be d. previously, because it's talking about early cars.
<span>The scene
you are referring to in _Walk Two Moons_ occurs in Chapter 23, “The Badlands.” When Sal’s mother says she wants to visit
Idaho in order for her cousin, whom she has not seen in 15 years, to tell her
what she is really like, she means that she wants to be told (or even reminded)
what she was like before she was a mother and before she was married. It seems as if she wants to be reminded of
the person she feels she no longer is.
And, to come into contact with one whose last memory of her is of whom
she used to be is why she wants to go to Idaho.</span>
I'm not 100% sure I'm correct but I'm pretty sure you can make 227 words with these letters,