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Pepsi [2]
3 years ago
11

Please answer both questions CORRECTLY. Asap please. 12 points

English
1 answer:
olga55 [171]3 years ago
8 0

The answer for the first one is C. and the second on is D.

Hope this helps

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Choose the answer that identifies the objective case pronouns.
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Difference between will and begoing to​
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Will is utilized for recent, quick judgments as well as when speaking with assurance about the future. be going to is a phrase used to describe pre-planned events.

The modal verbs will and shall are. They are combined with the primary verb's base form (They will go; I shall ask her). Will and it's opposite, "will not" or "won't," are examples of modal auxiliary verbs. This indicates that the third person singular does not have an s and is followed by the infinitive: I will depart later. You'll depart after I do. Later, he or she will depart.

When we want to do something before we talk, we employ the going to verb. Before speaking, we have already taken a decision. We can express an idea in the near future by using the phrase be going to and a verb in the infinitive: I'm going to talk to him. I'll speak with him soon. Next month, several staff will receive promotions.

Most talks utilize one of two future tenses: the future with "will" or the future with "going to." The primary distinction between the two forms is that "going to" refers to preparations and intents formed in advance of speaking, whereas "will" refers to speaking about the future as it will be at that very moment.

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Hamlet is an enigma. No matter how many ways critics examine him, no absolute truth emerges. Hamlet breathes with the multiple dimensions of a living human being, and everyone understands him in a personal way. Hamlet's challenge to Guildenstern rings true for everyone who seeks to know him: "You would pluck out the heart of my mystery." None of us ever really does.

The conundrum that is Hamlet stems from the fact that every time we look at him, he is different. In understanding literary characters, just as in understanding real people, our perceptions depend on what we bring to the investigation. Hamlet is so complete a character that, like an old friend or relative, our relationship to him changes each time we visit him, and he never ceases to surprise us. Therein lies the secret to the enduring love affair audiences have with him. They never tire of the intrigue.

Hamlet not only participates in his life, but astutely observes it as well. He recognizes the decay of the Danish society (represented by his Uncle Claudius), but also understands that he can blame no social ills on just one person. He remains aware of the ironies that constitute human endeavor, and he savors them. Though he says, "Man delights not me," the contradictions that characterize us all intrigue him. "What a piece of work is a man! How noble in reason, how infinite in faculties, in form and moving how express and admirable, in action how like an angel, in apprehension how like a god!"

Hamlet is infuriatingly adept at twisting and manipulating words. He confuses his so-called friends Rosencrantz and Guildenstern — whom he trusts as he "would adders fang'd" — with his dissertations on ambition, turning their observations around so that they seem to admire beggars more than their King. And he leads them on a merry chase in search of Polonius' body. He openly mocks the dottering Polonius with his word plays, which elude the old man's understanding. He continually spars with Claudius, who recognizes the danger of Hamlet's wit but is never smart enough to defend himself against it.

Words are Hamlet's constant companions, his weapons, and his defenses. In Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, a play that was later adapted into a film, playwright and screenplaywright Tom Stoppard imagines the various wordplays in Hamlet as games. In one scene, his characters play a set of tennis where words serve as balls and rackets. Hamlet is certainly the Pete Sampras of wordplay.


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