Answer:
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What’s the conflict of the story?
Answer:
Mina is an educated woman who is engaged and then married to Jonathan Harker. She is a schoolteacher, and financially independent. While her husband studies law, she also tries to keep up on his studies. The other men in the novel praise her for having a 'man's brain'. She is a smart cookie, but also a very devoted wife. She tends to Jonathan as he recovers from his ordeal with Dracula in Transylvania and wants to be of help to him whenever possible. She often comments on her gratitude for the strong, brave men around her, while also acting as a kind of mother to the group. Count Dracula tries to turn her into a vampire, but through her own will and the help of the other male characters, she is saved.
Explanation:
Lucy Westenra is a 19-year-old woman who lives with her mother. She is described as very beautiful and almost angelic in her looks and her personality. She is kind and innocent, but a little bit vapid. She is mostly concerned with finding a husband. On account of her good looks, she is proposed to by three different men in one day! The decision is difficult, and she laments to Mina that she wishes she could marry all three men, which is quite a scandalous thing to say! Lucy ultimately accepts Arthur Holmwood. Lucy becomes the victim of Count Dracula, and she is turned into a vampire.
Answer:
Explanation:
<u>This is not the full question, the answering options are missing. They are as following</u>
- <u>business partnership. </u>
- <u>orsanmichele.</u>
- <u>guild. </u>
- <u>local church.</u>
<u>The correct answer is a guild.</u>
Crafts and professions had been controlled by the guilds in the biggest part of Europe during the Renaissance. As art was considered to be a craft at the time, it was also included.
<u>One could not participate in it without the guild membership. Getting involved in the guild meant getting proper training and having access to commissions, but also settled the length of the contracts and how many students a master could train. </u>Guild rules allowed masters to sign as their own any art that left their workshop.
<u>At the end of the training, the student had to show the guild piece of artwork which would prove that he indeed mastered the art.</u> This is how the usage of the term masterpiece has started.
I'm <em>pretty</em> sure that it would be; perceptual priming