Well, I believe Edward the Confessor was the famous Anglo-Saxon historian.
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I honestly think it is C. 3 but I could be wrong
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comment if I am wrong and I will try to correct it
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When they summarize a report or essay, they have already gotten an idea of the theme and main idea, which can help them tailor any feedback.
show paper umm i really dont understand what this question is asking
Hamlet sees Fortinbras and his troops--twenty thousand soldiers--ready to lay down their lives for a plot of land that means nothing to them. When he sees this he realizes that if so many men are willing to die for something basically worthless, he is even more of a coward than he thought because he won't even fight to avenge his father's murder. He becomes disgusted with himself in his soliloquy at the end of this scene and vows to take action. This is Hamlet's major shift in the play: he says, at the end "my thoughts be bloody, or be nothing worth", and from this point on in the play he becomes more ruthless (getting Rosencrantz and Guildenstern killed to start) and goal-oriented towards killing Claudius.