<u>What do you believe is the ‘moral’ or ‘lesson’ of the story the Knight’s Tale?</u>
Palamon and Arcite are quite similar, and neither one seems to have the stronger claim on Emelye. The main theme of the tale is the instability of human life—joy and suffering are never far apart from one another, and nobody is safe from disaster. Moreover, when one person's fortunes are up, another person's are down.
Answer:
without hip twist its no use because of the directions of the twist rotation perpendicular to punch
I think its
B.by showing Doli's growing frustration w/ human choices.
bc she sounds frustrated when she states "muddled" im not 100% but thats my take.
hope it helps!
Answer:
Remember its the South and it's Whites first then blacks
Explanation:
In the middle of filling T.J.'s order, a white woman comes in. Mr. Barnett stops filling T.J.'s order to help her.
Cassie objects to this, and Stacey tells her to be quiet.
After helping the white woman, Mr. Barnett returns to T.J.'s order. This time, he gets interrupted by a little white girl buying pork chops.
Cassie gets really mad (and really, who could blame her?), and thinks it's just completely ridiculous for Mr. Barnett to help another child before T.J. She can understand him helping an adult first, but not a child.
Cassie decides to intervene, and tells Mr. Barnett that T.J. was waiting and he was in line first.
Mr. Barnett is not cool with this, and yells out for Cassie's mother. Well, he says this in much more demeaning terms: "Whose little n***** is this?"
Cassie bites back, letting him know that the situation is unfair.
Mr. Barnett makes Stacey take Cassie out of the store.