Answer:
Tithe-to give a tenth part of money or goods
Unconfessed-to keep one's sins hidden from god
Hopelessness-defenseless, powerless
Complete- at the end;finished
Adoration-prasing god in prayer
Repent-an act of Turing away from a sin
Scared-set apart for worship
Introductory-coming before something else
Unworthiness-having no value or honor
conditional-calling on a requirement before somethinh
Explanation:
(Sorry if some of them are wrong)
Act III of Julius Caesar might be considered the climax, or most intense part or the play, because this is where all of Brutus' conflict comes to a head. It is also the longest act of the play. The act begins with Caesar's arrival in the Capitol. Almost immediately, he is approached by Artemidorus, who offers him a letter of warning about the conspirators. He begs Caesar to take the letter because it pertains to his well-being. However, saying that his personal matters are the least of his concerns, Caesar refuses to take the letter. Meanwhile, one man wishes Brutus and Cassius good luck in their "enterprise," causing Cassius to wonder if their plans have been discovered. One of the conspirators pulls Antony away on business so that he won't interfere in the conspiratorial plans.
Answer:
In the 1932 presidential election, Roosevelt defeated Republican President Herbert Hoover in a landslide. Roosevelt took office in the midst of the Great Depression, the worst economic crisis in U.S. history.
Explanation:
The most common are 1st and 3rd person. 1st person is when you tell a story from your point of view, using the pronouns "I or we." And 3rd person is from an outside point of view, using the pronouns "he, she, and they." 2nd person isn't very common because it uses the pronoun "you," and makes the audience a character in the story. Hope this helps!
Marullus seems to sense that by entering into this civil disorder he is committing a crime. This fear foreshadows what happens. In Act 1, Scene ii, Casca tells Cassius and Brutus that the tribunes Marullus and Flavius, Caesar's political enemies, have been caught disrobing the statues. They have been put to silence.