Answer:
The last option, 'An earlier play, possibly written by Shakespeare: Ur-Hamlet' Should be correct : )
Answer: Keeping guns out of the hands of people who are likely to harm themselves or others—before they act—is the most effective way to prevent gun violence.
Explanation: Federal law requires background checks on all gun sales from licensed firearm dealers to ensure that gun buyers do not fall into one of the categories of people prohibited by law from having a gun. But the law does not require background checks on sales from unlicensed sellers, including online or at gun shows—making it easy for a prohibited person to acquire a gun. Federal law also fails to prohibit certain categories of people with particularly dangerous histories, and it does not provide a process through which people who are likely to commit violent acts against themselves or others can be blocked from having access to guns.
Answer:
a. I wish I was feeling sick.
b. I wish one didn’t have to know the answer of a question from the lesson.
c. I wish I live in a countryside.
d. I wish I dreamt of being a billionaire.
e. I wish I have poor English.
Explanation:
1) <span>Banquo and Macbeth enter. Banquo addresses the witches--they do not look like normal inhabitants of the earth and have beards. They in turn hail Macbeth as Thane of Glamis, then Thane of Cawdor, finally as future king. Banquo wonders why Macbeth starts at their words, and asks what they would prophecy for him, though he is less concerned than Macbeth with what they have to say: "If you can look into the seeds of time / And say which grain will grow and which will not, / Speak then to me, who neither beg nor fear / Your favors nor your hate."
2)</span><span>Back in Scotland, at </span>Macbeth's<span> castle in Dunsinane, a doctor waits with one of Lady </span>Macbeth's<span> gentlewomen. They're keeping an eye out for Lady </span>Macbeth's<span> sleepwalking, which the gentlewoman reported began once </span>Macbeth<span> left to prepare the house for battle.
3)</span><span>Yes, because some people's lives are living tragedies. Sure, times and living conditions aren't as hard as they used to be for most, but some people invite tragedy into their lives and some poor souls seem to be cursed with it. One person that comes to mind is Jackie Hance, whose drunk sister-in-law murdered Jackie's three young girls.
Reference: </span>https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0ahUKEwih7crP_qHQ...