From Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales excerpt that contradicts the claim made in the third line that the prioress speaks fluent French is "For French of Paris was not hers to know."
In the General prologue, Chaucer satirizes several characters from various classes and professions. Beginning with the highest class to lower. The first character whom Chaucer introduces is the Prioress who is a nun. She is the first among the female to be described, the first question that evokes in the reader's mind is that such higher religious clergy doesn't take a vow of leading a simple life? Hence, Chaucer satirizes the church, as the members of the church belonged from the upper class. The prioress took advantage from the poor for her own good. She was very well '<em>dainty</em>' and was well-dressed. Being known as <em>"Madame Eglantyne"</em>, she was so pretentious that she hardly knew any words of French.
Answer:y establishing the unnamed narrator as the medium through which we, the readers, receive Marlow's story, Conrad places ultimate control of the novel, as a whole, in the frame narrator's hands.
Explanation:
Seperate
Seperate is the error. It is spelled incorrectly. The second e should be an a. The correct spelling for the word is separate. There are no other errors in the sentence as all of the other words are spelled correctly. Since this is probably a sign, usually end punctuation is not included. If end punctuation is necessary, a period or exclamation point would be correct.
Answer:
When the the wildest imagination of a nightmare becomes reality...
Explanation:
<em>The nuclear accident in the Ukraine (1986) brought not only disaster and terminal diseases for a whole generation in the wide region of Chernobyl, but it also made painstakenly clear that the end of the earth was not so far away (neither in time nor space) from western societies in Europe as we thought it would or should be. The radiation fallout was registered as far as the North Sea between England and the continent. In a sense disasters like the one in Chernobyl (Cherno means </em><em>Black</em><em>) wake us up from our little naïve dream world and make us realise how fragile our existence can be. </em>