How Does The Burning Times | The History of Witches Part 1 Work?

It’s like a storybook that changes based on how long you read it, the longer you read, the more happens.

Imagine you have a magic wand that turns your drawings into real things. But this wand only works for as long as you hold it. If you let go too soon, the drawing doesn’t finish. That’s like burning time, how much time passes before something finishes happening.

The Witch’s Storybook

Think of witches as readers in a big, exciting storybook. Each witch has their own page, and they read it at their own speed. Some witches read fast, they finish their pages quickly, while others take longer to enjoy every detail.

If you want to know what happens next in the story, you have to wait for the witch to finish reading. The burning time is like a timer that counts how long each witch has to read before the story moves on to the next page.

So when the timer runs out, that’s when the story changes, and new things start happening! It’s like a storybook that changes based on how long you read it, the longer you read, the more happens.

Imagine you have a magic wand that turns your drawings into real things. But this wand only works for as long as you hold it. If you let go too soon, the drawing doesn’t finish. That’s like burning time, how much time passes before something finishes happening.

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Examples

  1. A village blames a woman for bad harvests and burns her at the stake.
  2. Kids in school learn that people used to think witches caused storms.
  3. A man is accused of being a witch because he knows secrets.

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