I think Macbeth is more anxious about murdering King Duncan. He becomes paranoid in the moments leading up to him killing the King, such as hearing spirits saying that he has "murdered sleep" and cannot speak the name of God. He hallucinates a dagger, as well and is only really able to produce enough courage to kill King Duncan when Lady Macbeth pressures him into doing it, calling him cowardly.
Lady Macbeth also says to Macbeth that if he is too scared to kill Duncan, she will do it herself. Shakespeare writes Lady Macbeth as a ruthless character, and she doesn't show much anxiety over killing Duncan.
Answer:
The only possible answer is (E) not even the giants in the field, such as Leonard Euler and Karl Gauss, was
Explanation:
- In the statement, We need ‘was’ as no singular mathematician is singular.
- And finally options C uses 'like' to introduce the 2 mathematicians, making the option incorrect.
- Leaving the last option E.