Chaucer uses several different techniques to create lively characters, but the best option from the list would be
"indirect characterization" if you have to choose one.
Explanation:
In The Canterbury Tales, Geoffrey Chaucer originally uses indirect techniques of characterization in identifying the various pilgrims in the General Prologue and completely the whole poem. Unlike primary characterization in which the narrator simply tells the reader what sort of personality a role has, secondary characterization allows the reader to form his or her own conception of the character in question
The themes of friendship and loyalty are developed in these excerpts by the use of the infidelities. Tennessee had an affair with his partner's wife and she accepted him. However, she was also unloyal to him and she finally abandoned him to go with another man. The relationship between Tennessee and his partner is a ckear example of loyalty and frienship because even though Tennessee courted his wife they continue being friends, they had an affection that was unconditional. Tennessee's partner admired him and that feeling continued after his death.
Answer:
c
Explanation:
he was the only one to spend time with him
As it is with all behavior, it is nothing but natural that certain <em>manuals</em> on how to act before situations are passed along from one generation to another. It is passed to us by our parents and grandparents and whoever else took part in our early-stage education, as it was passed to them by their parents and grandparents, and so on.
These teachings from our early years dwell deep in our unconscious for our whole life, even if we try to deny them (behave differently than how we were taught) because they are passed to us on the same period when our very personality is being formed. This is actually what dictates probably over 90% of how we react before situations on a daily basis. Even though we may choose to act differently than what it says on those '<em>manuals</em>', there's always an urge to act accordingly.
The sense of chivalry and gallantry from men towards women is a great example of these unconscious-driven behaviors application. The feeling of the need to put women on pedestals is so deeply rooted in men's unconscious, that they simply can't help not doing it, because also there is a catch: Since these <em>manuals</em> are given to us in the foundation of our personality, they are what we most rely on when dealing with situations that make us nervous somehow. People tend to act through them on job interviews, when speaking to an audience at a presentation, or when a guy is meeting a girl for the first time.
The best way to 'fight' this urge, and act more freely from these manuals, is through self-reflexion towards self-awareness. Only by better understanding ourselves that we may start acting freely from our old beliefs that limit us.