Want this question answered?
38 kids 152 men 76 women
4
There are 5 men, 10 children, and 20 women in the party.
Most women do love their children more than a man. However, it is really different for each woman.
90
I guess that depends on what you think rich is. Some of them were well off, others were not. The group came together because of religion, not wealth. None of them were rich enough to live in a castle, but as a group they worked to help each other and establish a colony together.
The five social groups represented by Chaucer's pilgrims in "The Canterbury Tales" are the nobility (Knight, Squire, Franklin), clergy (Prioress, Monk, Friar, Summoner, Pardoner), professionals (Doctor, Lawyer, Guildsmen), tradespeople (Merchant, Shipman, Cook, Wife of Bath), and laborers (Miller, Manciple, Reeve, Plowman).
1316
The premise of The Canterbury Tales is a group of pilgrims traveling to the shrine of Thomas Becket in Canterbury, England. To pass the time, each pilgrim tells a tale, resulting in a collection of stories that range from comedic to moralistic, providing insight into medieval society.
About one.
The purtains were told to tattle on the pilgrims
The prutains were told to tattle on the pilgrims