Answer:
Ophelia gives the rosemary to her brother Laertes.
She gave the flowers to him to most probably means she wants him to never forget her even after her death. it could also mean that she wants him to never give up on until he avenged their father's death.
Explanation:
In Act IV scene v of the play "Hamlet" by William Shakespeare, the scene projects the event where Laertes had arrived back to the kingdom to try to avenge the death of his father. He was given the rosemary flower by his "mad" sister Ophelia who had supposedly gone insane after being torn by the death of their father Polonius.
In her 'mad' scene, Ophelia uses the different flowers to present her inner feelings through them. She gave Laertes rosemary "for remembrance", signifying that she wants him to remember her (most probably). This flower which stand for fidelity, lover and romance 'lasting memory' is given to Laertes so that he may never forget to take revenge on their father's killer. Or it could also act as a foreboding act of what is to happen in the coming scenes, meaning she wants him to remember her after she dies.
(Points : 2)
you must have patience, gentleness, and courage.
you must have patience, gentleness, and a sense of being full of courage.
you must have patience, gentle, and courage.
you must have patience, be gentle, and courage.
No improvement or correction is required.
The answer is:
you must have patience, gentleness, and courage.
By doing so, you do a parallel construction and you don´t need to be repeating must have, this way you shorten the sentence and make it easier to understand.
A.greeted his
B.the politician
C.After his speech
D.his supporters
O a lake, to suggest deeper meaning
O a woman, to suggest personification
a magician, to show that life depends on how you look at it
OW
Answer: The answer is the The second one it turned into a lake, to suggest a deeper meaning.
Explanation:
In the sentence "Throughout history, people have turned great ideas into useful inventions" the word ideas is the object direct.
The direct object of a verb is the thing being acted upon. A direct object comes after a transitive verb. Direct objects can be nouns, pronouns, phrases, or clauses. Sometimes direct objects are single words.
Direct objects can also follow verbals—infinitives, gerunds, and participles.