Answer:
"A fool and his money are soon parted"
Explanation:
This proverb explains that no matter what, if you are a fool, you will not have money since you do not understand how to use it.
For example, how do you think a wise man would utilize his credit cards verses a foolish man? The wise man would be diligent to spend only what he could afford and make sure to pay back every penny, but the fool would spend it all right away.
Answer:
D: Memorable
Explanation:
If someone was to make a rhythm for their narrative poem, maybe that's an easy way for them to remember there story. That's how i think of it, but to be honest i don't know.
This question is incomplete. Here's the complete question.
Read The Lessons of Salem, by Laura Shapiro
What ironic situation does Shapiro describe in paragraph 3?
Answer: The irony of having those who “confessed” to witchcraft spared and those who defended their innocence being killed.
Explanation:
The Puritan witch hunts of 1692 would get confessions by torturing the suspects to justify the hunt itself, and those who would refuse to confess would end up being hung to death. The irony lies in the fact that none of the suspects had anything to do with witchcraft, and the proceedings of the trials were especially prejudicial to those who were honest.
Don Quixote has been called "the first novel" by many literary scholars (or the first of the modern European novels).
D. <em>uncharitable</em>.
The suffix <em>-able</em>, borrowed from Old French and originally from the Latin <em>-ābilis</em> (meaning "worthy of being acted upon"), can have different meanings.
The most common one is "fit/liable to be (done)," as in:
- <em>likeable</em> - fit to be liked
- <em>washable</em> - fit to be washed
- <em>degradable</em> - liable to be degraded.
This, however, does not apply to <em>comfortable</em>. Another meaning of <em>-able</em>, however, is "giving, or inclined to," as in:
- <em>comfortable</em> - giving comfort
- <em>(un)charitable</em> - (not) inclined to charity.