Answer:
B.
Explanation:
honestly dont know if my answer is correct but hopefully it is :]
Randall squinted up through the trees, trying to gauge the time, but gave up quickly. He should have paid attention when his father taught the family to read the position of the sun. He should have paid attention, too, before sneaking off this morning on his first solo hike, forgetting the whistle his mother stressed he always bring.
He pictured his parents now at their camp beneath the tree with the eagle’s nest, wondering where he was. Randall was wondering the same thing. Lost and out of food, he feared he had but a few hours before darkness closed in, trapping him in the bitter cold with the creatures of the night.
He closed his eyes to fight back tears, when he heard it in the distance. Water! His father’s words came flowing into his mind; one tip he actually remembered. “If you’re ever lost, find a river and follow it.”
In a flash, he was on his feet, scaling fallen trees, tearing through brush, frantically following the sound. The sky grew darker, but the noise grew louder, and Randall, tired and scared, forged ahead until he found it. He reached the river bank and was mulling his next move when a sudden splash caught his eye.
A majestic eagle rose from the water, soaring skyward with a freshly caught fish in its talons. Could it be the same eagle nested above his camp? It glided triumphantly into a high nest a short distance away, eager to greet its family. Randall smiled, equally triumphant, eager to do the same as he followed the eagle’s flight.
In the distance, he saw his mother, his whistle clutched in her hand.
Using the information in your graphic organizer, write a paragraph in the space below explaining how theme develops in the story "The Nest
Topic 2: Explore how Macbeth changes over the course of the play.
Topic 3: Examine Macbeth and Lady Macbeth before Duncan’s murder. In what ways are they alike and different?
Topic 4: Examine Macbeth and Lady Macbeth after Duncan’s murder. In what ways are they alike and different?
Topic 1
A short analysis effectuated relatively to the character target of the present study reveals us the eternal struggle between Good and the Evil, between nature and will. Lady Macbeth tells us about someone who is dark is also sublime. Shakespeare's persona penetrates in a dense atmosphere marked by darkness, normally fountain of fear and terror that affects the characters, determining their actions.
However, the battle, in this case, was far from more, covering of execrable characteristics it leads us to try to unveil the reasons that led Lady Macbeth to act in this way. The first reason is obviously the excessive ambition, which does not look to ways to reach the ends, and which was more orientated especially for Macbeth of which properly for her. We may be able to conclude that Lady Macbeth did wrong, but she acted for love, and that was attached to her situation of wife and to the type of conjugal relationship of her time. Her whole attitude was of an ideal wife who does everything to provide the best to her husband, in this case, the Crown of Scotland. Her androgyny was nothing but a stratagem to help her husband to get his intentions. Lady Macbeth despises in her husband everything that makes him weak, but she does not despise him. She stands beside him, being destroyed by him, trying till the end her dedicated wife's role.
She claims to the Dark Spirits:
"........................... Come, you spirits
That tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here,
And fill me from the crown to the toe, top-full
of direst cruelty! Make thick my blood;
Stop up th'access and passage to remorse,
That no compunctious visitings of my nature
Shake my fell purpose, nor keep peace between
Th'effect and it. Come to my woman's breasts
And take my milk for gall, you murd'ring ministers,
Wherever, in your sightless substances,
You wait on nature's mischief. Come, thick night,
And paíl thee in the dunnest smoke of Hell,
That my keen knife see not the wound it makes,
Nor Heaven peep through the blanket of the dark
To cry, "Hold, hold."
(1.5.39-53)
The topic is "Topic 2: Explore how Macbeth changes over the course of the play."
In the opening scene of William Shakespeare's play "Macbeth," Macbeth is presented as a valiant and devoted Scottish commander well-liked by King Duncan and his contemporaries. However, Macbeth experiences a significant change as the play goes on.
He finally commits horrific deeds due to his initial moral turmoil, which is motivated by his ambition and the witches' forecasts. He first hesitates to kill King Duncan, but once Lady Macbeth convinces him to do so, he gives in to his ambition and cruelty, which results in Duncan's death.
After the murder, Macbeth's guilt and paranoia worsen, making him more vicious and paranoid. He hires killers to kill Banquo and his son Fleance, and his obsessive desire for power consumes him.
To learn more about Macbeth link is here
#SPJ3
B. - a journalist writes about the life of a famous politician
C - a woman writes about her experiences as a teacher
D - an author writes a story about a historical king
E - a man writes about his life as a prisoner in a foreign country
(There are two answers)
Answer:
d, and b
Explanation:
Answer:
Hamlet mourns deeply for his father when he gets to about his father's death from Claudius. He decides to fake madness for revenge, and wearing that mask, he calmly analyzes every detail, every action he has to take for the revenge of his father. However, he starts to hesitate and comes to the conclusion that revenge is not a good option.
Laetes also grieves for his father's death and chooses to take revenge. Unlike Hamlet, he was fully driven by emotions and was easily influenced, he didn't analyze any detail or actions he had to take for revenge, which eventually led him to death by his own sword.
Fortinbras was also driven be emotions, but he had no grief for his father. He was only driven by the desire to get the crown, to get victory at any costs. In the end he was also not crowned like Hamlet, which was a shock for him
Answer:
The word cheap has a negative connotation associated with it therefore when read it'll give the reader a negative feeling about the action being done.
Explanation:
Not much can be specified about how it affects the passage due to me not having access to it but I hope this helped.
Answer:
The connotation suggest that the new glasses will break even more easily than the others.
Explanation: