Situational Irony
Situational irony is the contrast between what is expected to happen and what actually does happen. It refers to a specific situation or event. Verbal irony is the contrast between what someone says and what is actually meant. Think sarcasm. Dramatic irony is when the audience knows a key piece of information that a performer on stage does not. An example is Romeo and Juliet during the balcony scene. The audience knows Romeo is listening in on Juliet's private thoughts, but she does not. A conflict is a problem and the resolution is how it is fixed.
Have a sleepover. you’ll figure it out once you’ve lived with them for a hot second.
Answer:
B. Hamlet expresses despair over life, remembers his mother and father’s relationship, and then expresses his frustration with the current state of his family.
Explanation:
Hamlet is hopeless about the world and everything that is happening. He is very sad and disappointed with the direction that his family took. Hamlet's lament happened because he is sad that his father, a good and caring man, died and that before completing two months of his death, his mother decided to marry again, with Hamlet's uncle. He finds it disgusting and disrespectful to his father who was such a good husband.