The correct answer is option A: He tells him the "giants" are windmills.
Cervantes wrote Don Quixote in two parts, published respectively in 1605 and 1615. Sancho and Don Quixote come across a field of windmills, which Don Quixote sees as a group of giants. Sancho tells him they are not giants but windmills. Don Quixote replied that Sancho is not experienced in these matters, and that is why he can not see that they are clearly giants. Then, Sancho tries to dissuade Quixote, but he attacks one of the windmills, damaging his spear and acquiring some injuries. Sancho tells Quixote that it was foolish to attack the windmills. Quixote tells him that the evil magician Freston changed the giants into windmills to deprive him of his victory.
The answer is <span>c. Etymology</span>
Answer:
As described on the poem, the car's driver refers the individual who caused him to stop his car as an "old man". Therefore, it is implied the driver is much younger than that individual.
Elderly people are characterized as wise beings, given the broader amount of experience they have gained throughout their lifetime - produced by their longer primacy on Earth. Humans shape their behaviour as they age up, thus, elders think very differently than younger generations. In the case of the poem, the old man holds stronger moral values towards the toads than does the driver - creating a misunderstanding between the characters.
Explanation:
Espada's repetition of the phrase "This is the year" throughout the poem suggests that each event the speaker imagines must happen in order to
A. Eliminate suffering and right the injustices in the world.
B. Wrench power from the people who really deserve it.
C. Punish the people who have created such a harsh world.
D. Inspire people to vent their anger against an unfair system.
Espada's repetition of the phrase "This is the year" throughout the poem suggests that each event the speaker imagines must happen in order to eliminate suffering and right the injustices in the world.
Answer :Option A.
Explanation:
‘This is the year’ is the beginning line of the poem ‘Imagine the angels of bread’ which written by Martin Espada. This poem is a combination of anger, hate, dream, vision, and hope. It is a three stanza poem and every stanza begins with the line ‘this is the year’, where the poet have described various events.
The poet wants to eliminate all the sufferings and injustice from the world. In the first stanza the poet expresses anger, in the second stanza he is a bit hopeful, whereas in the third stanza the poet calls for action of a better future which is free from sufferings and injustice.
Answer:
Explanation:
How do Indy and Marion escape the Well of Souls? Indy knocks down one wall of the chamber by toppling a giant statue of Anubis to reveal an adjoining room (filled with mummified corpses) that leads to the surface.