Hi FallDownGuys,
Your Question:
Read the excerpt from Act III, scene iii of Romeo and Juliet. Friar Laurence: Romeo, come forth; come forth, thou fearful man: Affliction is enamour’d of thy parts, And thou art wedded to calamity. What is the meaning of the phrase "thou art wedded to calamity”? You have not had enough disaster in your life. You often have disaster around you. Your marriage will be a complete disaster. Your confusion is the cause of many disasters
Answer:
Your marriage will be a complete disaster.
The reason its the answer i choose because it states in the sentence "thouh art wedded" which means they got married and the fact that it says calamity at the end states the marriage wont last due to the disasters that will happen between them.
Calamity - "an event causing great and often sudden damage or distress; a disaster."
Wedded - getting married
Answer:
look away-method is the correct answer.
Explanation:
Answer:
The answer would be (A) Pacing.
Answer:
Each new step in science reconciles twenty seemingly discordant facts as merely the various manifestations of a single principle.
Explanation:
Even though the only context we have is the sentence itself, we can safely choose number 2. This type of sentence is used when we wish to present contrasting ideas. There would be no reason, for example, for science to unify what is already harmonious, or to undermine what is already erroneous. Those ideas are redundant. It makes much more sense to say that science reconciles facts that are seemingly discordant. That is the wonder in science: to see different things as the manifestations of a single principle, which could seem, if science did not exist, impossible.