Answer:
when i was successful i talked my opponent in football cause everybody cheered for me :D
Explanation:
These words are uttered by Macbeth after he hears of Lady Macbeth’s death, in Act 5, scene 5, lines 16–27. Given the great love between them, his response is oddly muted, but it segues quickly into a speech of such pessimism and despair—one of the most famous speeches in all of Shakespeare—that the audience realizes how completely his wife’s passing and the ruin of his power have undone Macbeth. His speech insists that there is no meaning or purpose in life. Rather, life “is a tale / Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, / Signifying nothing.” One can easily understand how, with his wife dead and armies marching against him, Macbeth succumbs to such pessimism. Yet, there is also a defensive and self-justifying quality to his words. If everything is meaningless, then Macbeth’s awful crimes are somehow made less awful, because, like everything else, they too “signify nothing.”
Answer:
All genres and mediums have one basic thing in common. They're all ways that people tell stories to each other. At the end of the day, these stories all imagine the same situation: Boy meets girl, parents tear them apart....
Explanation:
Sodium and aluminum are in the same period, and therefore have similar chemical properties. It's B.
Answer:
1st. Rainsford falls off the boat and swims to the island.
2nd. Rainsford goes to General Zaroff's house.
3rd. Zaroff gives choice- join hunt or be Ivan's game.
4th. Rainsford gets hunted.
5th. Rainsford made a complicated trail.
6th. Malay Man Catcher.
7th. Burmese Tiger Pit.
8th.
Explanation: