Answer:
avoid the bad things and people in life and do things that make you happy and not sad or angry...
Answer:
c. the revelation of how Macduff was born
d. the news that soldiers carrying boughs from Birnam Wood are approaching
Explanation:
Shakespeare's famous play, <em>Macbeth</em>, is a story about the Scottish general, his attempt to become a king and preserve the position. Macbeth is told by the three witches that no man born of woman will be able to harm him, as well as that he is safe until Birnam wood starts moving. Macbeth believes in what they say, ensured that his position as a king could not be compromised. However, towards the end of the play, Malcolm and his army are approaching the castle, camouflaged with the trees from the forest, and Macbeth realizes that he has been misled by the witches' prophecy. This becomes even more clear on the battlefield, when he finds out that Macduff was born by Caesarean section - he was not, in fact, "of woman born."
C. You must live up to your principles- you must give your daughters the same liberty as you advocate for other women.
Explanation:
- The doctor said when Clara was twenty, her father did not object to her learning chemistry or playing instruments. She would have assumed that to be very cruel if he had objected.
- When the father looked at Clara's dress, he thought it was torn and asked her about it. She said it was a divided skirt. Her father replied that her mother would not have liked that.
- Finally, he says, seeing their mistakes, he had realized his mistake.
To make the story intresting
Answer:
The correct answer is option D.
Explanation:
During his speech, Wiesel declares that the Jews, while they were captive and suffering, thought that the great leaders of the world did not know what was happening with them, because they would had stopped it.
But then, he realized that the great leaders knew it and yet did nothing.
To soften this criticism, he mentions that Franklin D. Roosevelt was undoubtedly a great leader, but nevertheless his behavior towards the Jews was flawed.
His speech talks about indifference in general, and how not being indifferent could save many lives.