Answer:
Sample Answer: Students should explain how Macbeth’s imagination works, giving examples from the act to support their ideas. For example, they might mention the dagger he imagines, which actually seems to lead him on to do the deed and in a sense helps him go through with it. They might also mention the voice he imagines after the murder saying that “Macbeth does murder sleep,” as his guilty conscience asserts itself and ensures that he will suffer more after the deed than before; it frightens him so much that he cannot complete the final details of the plot.
Explanation:
On Edgen.
b. information
c. knowledge
d. written information
Answer:
knowledge
Explanation:
B. My friend and her mother was listening to the radio.
b. threw
c. has thrown
d. will throw
a. this
b. I
c. essay
d. typed
to convey the family members' love for each other
B.
to clarify the events that led to Haimon's death
C.
to create sympathy in the audience for a mother's sorrow
D.
to suggest how severely those who disobey the gods will be punished
Answer: Sophocles includes Eurydice's death (D.) to suggest how severely those who disobey the gods will be punished.
Explanation: In Sophocles' Antigone, Eurydice is the wife of Creon, who is the king of Thebes. When she finds out that her son Haemon committed s(u)icide after discovering that Antigone, her lover, hanged herself, Eurydice also kills herself. All of these deaths are a consequence of Creon's attitude. Throughout the play, Creon behaves as an arrogant and proud man, especially when he goes against divine law by prohibiting everyone to bury Polyneices and ordering Antigone's execution. In that way, during the play, Creon challenges and disobeys the gods. As a result, the gods punish him with the deaths of his son and wife.
Answer:
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Explanation: