Answer:
Explanation:
thats rad of you to do that
A person's’s identity is so important within the world of Le Morte d’Arthur. Each character is defined not only by his familial relations, but also by his abilities, whether on the battlefield, as a lover, or as a leader. A person is also defined by his loyalties to his country or liege. Knights are usually defined with epithets about their abilities or loyalties, sometimes given through fate, sometimes through their own accomplishments. Many people struggle with identities given to them by fate or circumstance. For instance, when Arthur was young, he thought of himself as the adopted son of a landowner and knight, not as the heir to all of England. After Arthur learns he is the son of Uther Pendragon and Igraine, he has a hard time accepting his identity, even though that identity compels him to take power meant for him by fate. Similarly, his son Mordred also has difficulty accepting his identity - though he is predestined to kill his father, he is bothered by the Archbishop of Canterbury's statements on his sinful conception.
Answer:
The reason the author is showing some animals on the farm are more intelligent than others is to show that an equal society is not possible. They have 7 commandments but later some where changed later on and the very last one was changed from “All animals are equal” later on changed to “All animals are equal but some are more equal than others” Later the pigs where the ones that took over all the animals without them noticing. In history all these animals represent a dictator. The thing is most of these animals wanted power, once they got the power they use it for bad (dictatorship). Napoleon takes snowballs idea and calls it his own and gains power.
Explanation:
I read the book
If there is a. Different answer needed let me know
Answer: C. she worked as a women's suffrage worker
Explanation:
Maya Angelou (1928-2014) was an American poet, singer and civil rights activist. Angelou was also an actress, director and producer of television programs, movies and plays. In 1969, she wrote an autobiography - <em>I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. </em>However, she was not a women's suffrage worker, as women were already given the right to vote in 1920, eight years before Angelou was born.