How does Chaucer's choice to set the Canterbury tales in spring contribute to the narrative? a. it underscores the arduous journey the characters are about to take b. it emphasizes the limited time the characters have to make their pilgrimage c. it reinforces the notion that martyrdom is something to be avoided d. it cast the idea of religious pilgrimage as a new beginning
@vera_ewing
I Believe the answer is b. but let me check real fast.
Was i Correct?
I wont find out until i submit the test i have a bunch more question haha
How many more?
ok
like 11 more
K12? lol me to
Make different post.
oh it's D
i just checked a archive it is D
Which line from "The Pardoner's Tale" best displays the pardoners true attitude toward those who look to him for spiritual guidance? a. "...them from it, i can bring them ro repent..." b. "...a string of starving children, all agape." c."...a livelihood.i do not preach in vain." d. "Once dead what matter how their souls may far?"
D.
thank you
Because it shows the true attitude of those who look to him for spiritual guidance.
In the wife of baths tale with which of these statements does the knight decry his fate? a. "youre old and so abominably plain/ so poor...so low-bred..." b. "I could set right what you suppose a blunder/ thats if I cared to..." c. "christ wills we take our gentleness from him..." d. "But gentleness, as you will recognize/ is not annexed... to possessions."
My best guess would be b or a.
leaning towards b
"such is the power of love in gentle mind/ that is can alter all the course of kind" which of these bset restates these closing lines from Spences sonnet 30? a. Love must be reciprocated to be real b. Love can drive a person to madness c. Love can never truly be achieved d. Love ulimately makes no sense
what Question # is that?
what?
what question number is that? like.... 1., 5., etc..etc
9
a. is my best guess it's been awhile since i read the book
"If they be two, they are two so/ As stiff, twins compasses are two/ Thy soul the fixed foot makes no show/ To move, but doth, if th' other do." With statements best paraphares the lines above? a. Our hearts point the way to our love b. The direction of our love never changes c. Our hearts are united by nature itself d. We must always be aware of the direction our love is taking
this one is tricky
b. sounds like it but then again a. has a strong connection. Think about what you want to put down
I was originally thinking b
but looking at a kinda makes me want to put a
how many more questions? Might need to go in about 10-15 minutes.
only a few
oh and did you fan me? IF so Thank You!
Which of these lines from Shakespeare's Sonnet 29 portrays the emotion of joy/ a. and trouble deaf heaven with my bootless cries b. with what i most enjoy contented least c. desiring this mans art and that mans scope d. for thy sweet love remember'd such wealth brings
and yes i did haha
d. sounds Promising but b. has joy in it but i think it's a reverse-line-quote trick.
enjoy*
so which would you put?
b
"let me not to the marriage of true minds/Admit impediments..." In these lins from sonnet 116, how does shakespeare describe true love? Fleeting Unpredictable Invulnerable Indefinable
Indefinable or Unpredictable Choose what you think is more of the way Shakespeare would of put it.
I feel like Indefinable
Yep that was the Correct answer when i took the test. But K12 always changes there Answer Servers.
So just choose that.
Which of these excerpts from Pepy's The Fire of London most clearly indicates that the work is a first-person account? a. 'Extraordianry good goods carried in carts..." b. "Everybody endeavoring to remove their goods, and flinging into the river..." c. "Here i saw Mr. Isaake Houblon, the handsome man, prettily dressed and dirty..." d. "poor Mitchell's house, as far as the Old Swan, already burned that way..."
thinking about this one
yeah i have no clue haha
wow this is really weird i never have seen this question! It's probably c. though.
Which of these excerpts from Popes The Rape of the Lock most clearly depicts the upper-class as petty and shallow? a. "In various talk th' instructive hours they passed..." b. "but this bold lord with manly strength endued..." c. "...Who sought no more than on his foe to die." d. "... at every word a reputation dies."
b. seen this one before :)
how many more? Got to go in about 5.
like 2
ok
Can you see those okay? I figured it would be quicker than typing them so i dont waste your time
c is 15 and 16 i believe is D.
thank you so much for all your help
actually 16 might be c i think so
No Problem @SlayerNebula me <---- if you need anymore help.
I will(: have a great night
You too! Bye!
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