Answer:
When you are about to end make a statement that will show you are about to end without telling them it ended.. Hope it helps
Easy meat wool and fertilizer that’s all i know
<span>In lines 175-177 of Scene 5, Hamlet tells Horatio and Marcellus that he will pretend to be mad or crazy. This way he can spy on his mother and uncle without them knowing that he is only pretending being crazy.
Hamlet will carry out his revenge using subterfuge. He will gather evidences of his uncle's wrongdoing by bearing witness as a crazy person. If people will think that Hamlet has lost his mind, they will lower their guards and talk freely of their plans discounting Hamlet's presence in their midst. </span>
look up- IMPROVING YOUR SELF WORTH- MOTIVATIONAL SPEECH IT'S 6:53 Explanation:
There you go hope this helps! ON YOU TUBE
The answer to your question would be that the phrases from the passage that are oxymorons are the following ones: "happy dagger" and "timeless end".
An oxymoron is a figure of speech in which apparently contradictory ideas appear together. As a dagger is a weapon, it is wear that it appears next to a positive adjective such as "happy". As regards "timeless end", it can be said that the end of something represents a conclusion, it has an "end point", so it is contradictory to say that the end is "timeless".