Answer:
Macbeth's reaction to Duncan's murder is to feel guilt, remorse, regret, to express his guilty conscience, to refuse to enter Duncan's chamber, to struggle to compose himself and finish the deed, to experience hallucinations, and to ultimately feign innocence through a display of emotion at the murder.
Explanation:
this is a little hard but it seems to me that you have a wrong answer in number 2 you put ap over extremely but it should be over bird other than that you are good there is probably 1 or 2 mistakes so just go back over it i do not see anymore mistakes.
1. charging an official with a misdeed (a crime): impeachment
2. chosen; appointed (suggest someone for an election, job): nominated
3. to improve; to change: to make into a better quality: amended
4. reverse; change to the opposite position: overturn
5. whether the law or act is constitutional: constitutionality
6. court determination of constitutionality of laws passed: judicial review
Answer passage 1 is sentence 2 passage is sentence 3 both is sentence 1
3a
Explanation:
<span>Characterization occurs through the potentially biased point of view of one character.
The passage is told from the first person point of view, the narrator is talking about his interaction with Andy and how his opinion might have been different if he had met him under different circumstances. </span>