The info graphic refers the years 1400 to 1775 as a "great age" as it was the period of witch hunting all over the world.
<u>Explanation:</u>
During the early 1400, many got into witchcraft and went into absurd extreme things, and this was put to an end from 1400 to 1775.  The info graphic refers the years 1400 to 1775 as a "great age" as it was the period of witch hunting all over the world.
From the country Russia to the Bermuda and from Scotland to the coastline Brazil, the witch hunt was fierce. Many were taken in pursuit, like nearly 100,000 were put under the legal action of the government and nearly 50,000 were sentenced to death as their punishment.
Many were hanged both women and men and many were pressed to death cause of the disaster they did to many families especially in small families.
 
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Answer:
The given lines are taken from the book "Their Eyes Were Watching God" by Zora Neale Hurston.
Explanation:
Zora Neale Hurston's <em>Their Eyes Were Watching God</em> tells the story of African American women trying to survive in the world of the white authority. The narrator Janie tells her friend Phoeby about her three husbands and the life she had to live, trying to survive. 
The given passage is spoken by Nanny/ Janie's grandmother after her first marriage to Logan Killicks. And for Nanny, the union was a successful deal done, with land and a lawful husband, and all things that white women have. The passage reveals Nanny telling her granddaughter how a man and a woman should love equally. A man must have his pride and love a woman right, not kiss her foot and leg. Just like Nanny said <em>"when dey got to bow down tuh love, dey soon straightens up</em>". If he's kissing her foot and leg, meaning treating her too well, then there's only a short time when he will get back to his usual self.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Disprove your opponents arguments 
Use logic
Give your readers reasons why <span />
        
             
        
        
        
A historian's blog devoted to Shakespeare's characters
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Answer:
because you would want to know exactly what happened