Explanation:
My name is:(your name here) I'm (age) And I work at (your job) for a living.
In my free time I like to (one of your hobbies). I enjoy (the hobby you wrote) because its something special to me and it makes me (adjective that you pick). I also like ----, ----, and ---.
I would like to live in a nice, modern house in the city or in a cozy little apartment that isn't rundown but also isn't to to classy. I prefer living with someone who is (pick a gender or race or age) and doesn't have a party life style and has there life together.
A legend usally have a moral. Legend is similar to myths but a bit more real (like no gods and stuff)
Answer:
Thomas Putnam accuses his neighbors of witchcraft so that he can cheaply buy their land.
Explanation:
The Crucible (1953) is Arthur Miller's tragedy play in which many innocent people of Salem are falsely accused of witchcraft, arrested, tried wrongly and nineteen of them are hanged to death.
There are many references throughout the play that Thomas Putnam is a greedy and rich landowner who want to grab other's property/land by hook or by crook. He accuses not only John Proctor of witchcraft but many others of his neighbors as well.
Some references from the playing mentioning this fact are;
Putnam: <em>Why, we are surely gone wild this year. What anarchy is this? That tract is in my bounds, it’s in my bounds, Mr. Proctor.
</em>
Proctor: <em>In your bounds! indicating Rebecca: I bought that tract from Goody Nurse’s husband five months ago.
</em>
Putnam: <em>He had no right to sell it. It stands clear in my grand-father’s will that all the land between the river and</em>
Proctor:<em> </em><em>Your grandfather had a habit of willing land that never belonged to him, if I may say it plain.</em>
And
Giles Voice: "<em>Thomas Putnam is reaching out for land!"</em>
Giles:<em>"And there is none but Putnam with the; coin to buy so great a piece. This man is killing his neighbors for their land!"</em>