Answer: Act I: Introduce your characters and present the problem.Act II: Escalate the problem.Act III: Have the worst-case scenario happen.Act IV: Begin the ticking clock.Act V: Have the characters reach their moment of victory.
Explanation:
Answer:
Obstacles may be overturned into learning experiences by not repeating the same actions and/or options.
Explanation:
I can recount the time when I faced unemployment after finishing college. Although I had been a great student and had a lot of work experiences, I missed improvement and full responsibilities with work. That affected me by changing my lifestyle completely. Then, I started to turn the whole situation into one more learning experience in which I could take the advantage of not repeating the same mistakes anymore in a near future, such as the ones related to punctuality and ethics in workplace. These are all great features for a responsible worker (and learner, too).
Answer:
C. inaudible
Explanation:
inaudible would mean not able to be heard
Answer:
1. the acceptance of the church's authority
2. The Pardoner’s disregard for the poor reveals the Church’s hypocrisy
Explanation:
1. The feature of medieval life reflected here is the acceptance of the church's authority.
The Canterbury Tales has about 24 stories with about 17,000 lines. The work was written by Geoffrey Chaucer Geoffrey around a period of 1387 and 1400.
The Canterbury Tales is medieval literature and has great poetic power and entertainment value. The tales gives insight into the different social classes of that century, including their clothes, languages and the recreational activities of the time.
2. Based on the excerpt taken from this book, I can say that the statement that describes the satire here is The Pardoner’s disregard for the poor reveals the Church’s hypocrisy.
Chaucer used Satire to expose the hypocrisy of people and institutions who instead of reliving the poor from their poverty and leading them on a part of spirituality, try to make profits out of their suffering and show less concern about their suffering. The pardoner is a part of the church and should share in the suffering of others but instead he insists on getting the best food and drinks from people in poverty. He also sells redemption at a price
In both "Like the Sun" and "The Open
Window", truthfulness is the idea that is explored.
In Like the Sun, Sekhar decides to be truthful and makes a
pact with himself and eternity yet he soon finds out that being truthful isn't
so easy.
On the other hand, “The Open Window” conveys the message
that in a person's narrative about an incident, it is often difficult to
decipher the truth.