The answer is C. Thesaurus
Answer:
I believe the best answer to be letter A) There is hope amid difficulties.
Explanation:
In Langston Hughes's "Let America Be America Again", the speaker talks of how America was supposed to be a land of freedom and equality, but turned out to be the opposite for many. The speaker himself says more than once that America was never America to him. Still, at the end of the poem, he says America shall be America. The very people who are now oppressed shall claim America and make it what it should have been from the beginning. As we can see, the author has <u>hope</u>.
"I know you are reading this poem listening for something, torn / between bitterness and <u>hope
</u> / turning back once again to the task you cannot refuse." Those are lines from Adrianne Rich's poem "An Atlas of the Difficult Word". The speaker in the poem is well-aware that people are forced to live unfulfilling lives. She is also aware that many of them still have dreams, hopes, loves, thirst for more. No matter how poor, sad, tired, or busy people are, they can still find pleasure in life, even if it is by reading the poem.
Therefore, both poems talk of hope amid difficulties, of keeping on dreaming in spite of what oppression has done to prevent it.
<span>Hmmm my very favourite Shakespearian play and I have toured as a techie with this one, so I know it well.
Macbeth is a warm soul, but with ambition. We can all identify with that
one. However, when the witches promise him the kingdom, he is amazed
that he could get that far and discusses it with his beloved Lady. SHE
is the one who manipulates him and changes him.
Inside all of us, we have superstition and ambition. However, he is
gullible too and listens to Lady Macbeth ... although he knows it is
wrong, she convinces him that murdering the king is the right thing to
do. So he does....but panics, that is when we see Lady Mac in her real
light, she covers for him and makes certain the deed cannot be traced
back to him. She is the real villain here although she later looses her
mind due to the weight of what she has done and the fact that she has
lost her soul mate.
In doing all this she convinces her husband that he is wonderful and he
becomes power mad.... nothing can touch him and his atrocities mount,
but there is this nagging guilt that he fights to override at the
detriment of his mental health and this marriage.
Eventually he goes mad with guilt and greed for power....and whilst he
is convinced the witches warning can never come true...he is so sure of
himself, but he gets it wrong.
We all get these things wrong sometimes, we are all talked into things we shouldn’t do, and get it wrong and feel guilty.
Yes, we can all identify and in a strange way sympathize with Macbeth.
He was led astray by the witches and his wife...and then once he
believed them and was controlled by them, he became truly power hungry.
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Answer:
Crease between the eyebrows, an angry glint in his eye, trembling with anger, frown, scowling...
Explanation:
Answer:
B. They will be getting married.
Explanation:
The most helpful hint for answering this question is Theseus's use of the phrase "nuptial hour". Nuptial is an adjective denoting something related to wedding or marriage. From that, it can be concluded that Theseus and Hippolyta are about to be married.
In this Shakespeare's play, Theseus is a ruler of Athens who declares a four-day festival of feast and entertainment to celebrate his marriage with Hippolyta.
This provides a setting and time-frame for the plot of this Shakespeare's comedy.