Reveals Brainly makes me use more than 20 characters so im gonna type this extra stuff xD
In carterbury tales, a man who overindulges in sexual acitivities is "Lecher"
The prediction about the plot that this passage most supports is that Brutus will die.
In Shakespeare's play <em>Julius Caesar</em>, Brutus is one of the conspirators against Caesar. <u>Throughout the story, Brutus's main characteristic is his deep love for Rome</u>, which is what leads him to help the other conspirators to murder Caesar. According to them, killing him was what they did 'for the good of Rome' since Caesar had been abusing his power. In this excerpt, <u>Brutus tells Cassius, another conspirator, that he is willing to do anything for Rome, even dying</u> ("I love the name of honour more than I fear death"). Eventually, <u>his devotion for Rome and his people is what leads him to his death</u>. At the end of the play, <u>Antony proclaims Brutus 'the noblest Roman of them all'</u>.
Epic narratives are important for ancient cultures as that is most of the history preserved about those cultures. It also keeps their traditions, their heroes and their way of living alive. There are several epics which tell us today about the religious concepts of the people living in that time for example the epic of "Beowulf" tells us that people of that time had strong belief in good and bad, and in their metaphors we can derive the concept of Hell and Heaven.