Answer:
The journalist considered an excellent job offer
"If you like, I will go," called a voice from the crowd.
"Are you a seaman?"
"I am a yachtsman."
"If you’re sailor enough to get out on that fall, you can go down." Major Arthur Godfrey Peuchen—vice-commodore of the Royal Canadian Yacht Club—swung himself out on the forward fall and slid down into the boat. He was the only male passenger Lightoller allowed in a boat that night.
What does the reader learn about Peuchen from his actions in the excerpt?
He is an experienced seaman.
He is thinking only of himself.
His family is already in a lifeboat.
His main desire is to help the others in the boat.
What the reader learns about Peuchen from his actions in the excerpt above is that:
He is an experienced seaman.
He was not afraid to swing and slide himself towards the boat despite the distance between the boat and his location which indicates that he knew what he was doing.
Answer:
A
Explanation:
Answer:
False
Explanation:
Although feudalism first gained focus during the Carolingian Dynasty (Charlemagne was part of it), its roots date back to the 5th Century, after the Fall of Rome, a time of chaos and violence when tribes began fighting for power. The leaders and the most wealthy people started to develop a manorial system in which workers agreed to work and live in a landowner's large estates, and, in exchange, that landowner gave them protection.