Answer:
schools will be starting
summer coming to an end
they cant make me go!
kids are complaining
teachers are too strict and mean
why cant i be home?
sleep is depriving
the soft bed is calling me
cant finish my homework
overall school sucks
i never want to return
who invented it?!
my poem is done
give me the scholarship now
i am through. the end.
Other Haiku:
Respect for others
to keep youthful crime at bay;
consideration.
Quenya is the language of the High Elves in Tolkien-lore. (I assume you had to read the Hobbit, maybe review it again, since this was a rather important point.) The trolls, goblins, and orcs mostly speak Black Speech, and the hobbits speak Westron.
Answer:
1. Lady Macbeth
2.Macbeth wants to eliminate all obstacles in his way even if he has to resort to extremes and take innocent lives. Greed –a strong self-centered want for something such as wealth or power. Greed leaves you are always wanting more and you will never be satisfied.
3. Macbeth is physically weak as he is murdered by Macduff. This is completely different from how he was physically strong in the war at the beginning of the play. However, Macbeth is mentally Strong as he continues to fight for his kingship until the end, thus being courageous.
4. “Give every man thy ear, but few thy voice.” – Hamlet
“There is no darkness but ignorance.” – Twelfth Night.“Let grief Convert to anger.
Blunt not the heart, enrage it.” – Macbeth.
“For there is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so.” – Hamlet.
Explanation:
I hope this helps u! :)
“It was traditional in the Renaissance to imagine that cuckolds—men whose wives committed adultery—had horns on their heads. Benedick's evocation of this image suggests that any woman he marries is sure to cheat on him.”- Sparknotes
I would word it differently btw
Answer: Mrs. Hutchinson does not find the lottery unfair, until her husband is picked as a winner. It is only when the lottery directly affects her life that she complains about it.
Explanation:
Shirley Jackson's<em> "the Lottery"</em> is a story about a bizarre ritual that takes place every year in a small community. The winner of the lottery dies, and although the the villagers are aware of this terrible fortune that awaits the person who wins, they nevertheless participate in the lottery. They are afraid to end the lottery, simply because it has been taking place in their community for decades. They believe that something bad will happen if they put a stop to it - that they will somehow be cursed. They fail to realize what a tragic effect it has on families that lose their members, until they are found in that situation.
Mrs. Hutchinson does not complain until her husband is selected as a winner. She should have refused to participate in the lottery a long time ago, together with the rest of the community. Until the lottery directly influences their lives, the villagers consider it fair.