Answer:
Age doesn't define maturity. Yes, teenagers can experience true love. The reason why most don't is because of society. They are scared on how they are viewed. That's why they go after name brand over just a plain white tee shirt from walmart. Same thing with love, they are scared to commit. Commitment is the reason why. They are not mature or ready for that yet. But the answer is YES, teenagers can experience true love.
Explanation:
Answer:
Table of Content
Explanation:
This where the author's ideas are broken down into pieces.
<em>The Canterbury tale by Geoffrey Chaucer,</em> what the reader infer about the Friar through the following lines is that he will use people for money. Like the prioress and the monk, Friar too fails to establish any of the expected virtues. He arranged marriages by sounding generous because the young women are his mistresses and moreover pregnant.
Further, he injects money through committing the sin of selling "forgiveness' which is supposed to be freely given. Moreover, he kept no acquaintance with the sick or poor. He was a corrupt person, for the private gains he destroys the base of faith in people which was his duty to serve.
Answer to Question 1: Hamlet becomes increasingly furious with both himself and whoever harmed those who he cared about. A visceral sentiment of vengeance consumes him as he realizes his mind won't be at peace if he simply stands around fearfully inside his aristocratic eggshell, and the sentiment won't snuff out until the ones responsible for his anger are punished.
Answer to Question 2: Hamlet believes he will become a beast if he gives himself into an avenging wrath, but it does not matter to him as long as his grieving thoughts are cleansed. Ignoring the incident would simply preserve his plight.
Answer to Question 3: The audience should feel compasion for the man in duel, and be afraid that a good man who's well aware of his own thoughts and conclusions - a man that has lost nearly everything - gave into the rage.
Director's notes on Proper Soliloquies.
An actor who aims to perform a soliloquy must look around their environment, focus on a significant element of the scene, and procced to describe with detail how the sight makes them feel - repeat the process with the rest of the scene -. The actor should change the tone of their voice between the lines depending on the current feeling of their character; shouting it all should not be neccesary and might be considered exaggerated.
1. pair- two; a set
2. petal- part of a flower responsible for its colour
3. pear- a fruit
4. for- a preposition or conjunction
5. pare- to peel the skin of a fruit or vegetable
6. right- that which is correct or just
7. rain- water that comes from the sky in drops
8. rein- a long leather strap attached to a horse's mouth and used to guide it
9. reign- a sovereign's rule; period of a sovereign's rule
10. four- a numerical unit indicating something is one more than three
11. rite- a ceremony
12. pedal- a lever operated by a foot that promotes locomotion
13. write- to construct letters or symbols using a pen or pencil
14. peddle- to go from place to place selling things
15. fore- before; the front part; warning used in golf