I believe the answer is A) he is so upset that he loses his last hold on sanity and forces his men into a battle with Malcolm that they cannot win.
He is very sad that Lady Macbeth dies, and says he wishes she had died at a time when he could properly mourn her.
When he leads his men into battle, he says, "The queen, my lord, is dead,"
Hope this helps! Please let me know if I'm wrong :)
Answer:
Good for you :)
(Ignore this part it asked for 20 characters)
Well,
Let's start with these rules:
1. There should be a comma before a(n) direct/indirect quotation.
2. The ending punctuation should be before the close quotation.
3. The quotation should begin with a capital letter.
Option A does not have a comma, and does not capitalize the first letter, so it is eliminated.
Option C does not have a comma either.
Option B's exclamation mark is outside of the quotation marks, which excludes that.
The only option left is D, which is the correct answer.
This question is missing the options. I've found the complete question online. I'll omit the passage, since it is the same:
What does the phrase "nor become popular enough with the English to hitch a ride" tell readers about the potato?
1. People in England preferred eating Indian turnips and groundnuts to eating potatoes.
2. People in England did not like the potato enough to bring it with them on the Mayflower.
3. People in England were planning to take the potato with them on the Mayflower but changed their minds.
4. People in England did not like eating potatoes because the potato had been introduced by the Spanish.
Answer:
The phrase tell readers:
2. People in England did not like the potato enough to bring it with them on the Mayflower.
Explanation:
According to the excerpt, the potato did not reach the popularity it has nowadays for quite some time. It was introduced to Europeans around 1570,<u> but it was not liked enough for the English to want to bring it with them on the Mayflower. That is what the phrase "nor become popular enough with the English to hitch a ride" means. The potato did not "hitch a ride", meaning it was not taken back home with the English</u>. As a matter of fact, even in America - watch out because option 1 tries to make us confuse England and New England - the native inhabitants would eat other plant roots, but not the potato.