Answer:
Theirs 2 answers number 2 and 4 which is "We place you upon those seats" and "the affairs of the Five Nations shall be transacted."
Answer: metaphor
Explanation:
Laertes uses a metaphor, which is a figure of speech that depicts an object or an action to helps explain an idea or make a comparison.
Laertes tells Claudius that héll obey his decision and that he wants to be the "organ" of Hamlet´s death, however, Claudius decides to do it. Laertes claiming that he wants to the instrument of death for Hamlet is a metaphor because he uses the idea of an organ, which could be a biological human organ that helps the body carry out certain actions or a musical instrument that caries out a melody, to represent himself as an element that can do something else than killing to state that he wants to be the killer.
A simile also compares two different things, but it does so by using the words like or as, so is not the correct option for this example.
Dramatic irony refers to when the audience of a play knows something that the characters do not know, and an aside has a character speaking to the audience, so neither is correct for this example.
Well, we know that setting is location and surroundings, usually! Irony/sarcasm doesn't apply here, as it's usually in the form of dialogue or much more than those statements.Even if you were confused about tragic resolution, you know enough that there isn't anything particularly 'tragic' nor 'resolving' about this excerpt. So characterization seems best fit, giving an idea on the individual and their attire and how they are interacting with the other! But please, you're free to interpret it yourself in any case if doubtful upon my own.