All three prophecies seem to make it look like Macbeth will never be defeated, but Macduff and the armies find a way around all of them.
The first prophecy warns Macbeth to "beware Macduff", but then the second prophecy seems to contradict that by saying "none of woman born
Shall harm Macbeth.". Macbeth takes this to mean no person can harm him, so why should he be afraid of Macduff. As Macduff reveals in the last scene though, he was not naturally born, he was "ripped" early from his mother's womb.
The third prophecy seems the most impossible to Macbeth, that he should not fear "until Great Birnam wood to high Dunsinane hill Shall come against him." Macbeth believes it is impossible for the forest to move, but the armies cut down branches and to hold in front of themselves so they can hide their numbers. This makes it appear like the forest is moving towards Macbeth's castle.
I believe the answer is: B. It grabs the attention of your reader.
This is because an outline is a general description of a passage or text, if the outline of a story seems interesting someone will be more likely to read the story.
Answer:
I went to the show early ! And I was the only one there for only 30mins. Than more people had came to join me we all went in and found our seats and sat down on the balcony where we can see everything it was fun
Explanation:
Answer:
first of all you should no what a speech means
Tone or the Rebuttal. Try to include more details next time. ;)