A state of despire:::::::::::::::::::)
Answer:
Scout, Jem, Atticus, Dill, Arthur Radley, Bob Ewell, Maudie Atkinson, Calpurnia, Stephanie Crawford (Maybe Uncle Jack, they might mark your answer for not including him)
Answer:
do you have a picture of this text?
Explanation:
Answer:C-Contraries and Contradictions.
Explanation:When two(2) statements are contraries, it means they are pairs of propositions in which both cannot be true or correct but they can both be false.
When 2 statements or beliefs are contradictories, it simply means they are pairs of propositions in which both of them cannot be true and both of them cannot be false.
Two propositions can be contradictoring if they cannot both be true and they cannot both be false. That means the statements have opposite truth values.
Answer:
In this scene, Lady Macbeth seems to have gone completely mad. Of course, it is only happening when she is asleep, but her sleepwalking seems to show that she is deeply troubled.
She keeps getting up and doing things like pretending to wash her hands -- sometimes for fifteen minutes straight. She talks about the "spot" and about blood. Clearly, she is feeling guilt over the murders.
The gentlewoman does not really speak her feelings, but I think she is afraid. She says she has heard something she shouldn't have. And she says she doesn't want to tell what she's heard because (the implication is) Lady Macbeth would know she had told. So I think she is afraid of her mistress.
Explanation: