He uses it to allude to other fables and fairy tales. I love This fable your trying to explain, I was read it as a kid.
In any story, the main character is the protagonist, the central person which the whole story revolves around. Thus, the character who is the main character's opposition is the antagonist
The correct option is this: AROBIN IS A SOCIAL MAN.
From the passage given above, it can be seen that Arobin has characteristics and he exhibit manners that will make him an acceptable man socially. He dresses well, he mixes with people, he cracks good natured jokes and his countenance is always cheerful; all these are characteristics of a social man.<span />
The answer is C: Morgan Le Faye. She is trickster. She has controlled the poem's entire action from the beginning to the end. She is often the enemy of Camelot in Arthurian literature. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is a late 14th century Middle English chivalric romance. It is the one of the best known stories from the Arthurian era. It<span>s plot combines two types of folklore motifs, the beheading game and the exchange of winnings. The story speaks about King Arthur's Round Table Knight Sir Gawain, who accepts the </span>challenges from a mysterious "Green Knight".
Can you give more details?