Answer:
Third option: They are afraid of offending the royal audience.
Explanation:
The question is about Scene ii of Act i from the play "Midsummer Night’s Dream" written by William Shakespeare.
The laborers in Scene ii of Act i of this play plan to perform a play on the grand celebration preceding the wedding of Theseus and Hippolyta. They decide to perform the play "The Most Lamentable Comedy and Most Cruel Death of Pyramus and Thisbe". Apart from many other issues, they also consider that the lion in the play (which appears before Thisbe) may frighten the noble ladies, and the royal guests may be offended because of this.
The first and fourth options are incorrect because there is nothing such mentioned in the scene. Second option is incorrect because it was Snug (comically enough, he had to play the role of lion) who feared that he might not be able to learn his lines.
Answer:
The object of prepositional phrase is <em>force</em>.
Explanation:
<em>Prepositional phrase </em>is a phrase where the main word is preposition (the phrase could not function without it).
Most often the preposition is at the beginning of the phrase. It is followed by a noun or a pronoun which acts as the <em>object of that prepositional phrase. </em>Noun or pronoun can have a modifier which in this case is <em>such</em>.
One afternoon, an old man ordered in a nearby restaurant for breakfast.
He went inside, find a seat and sit comfortably.
Then one smiling waiter approached him and asked: "What's your order for this morning, sir?" The old man replied, "Can I have one rubbery egg and two slices of burnt toast, please?"
The waiter with his two brown eyes glow with awe, answered, "One rubbery egg and two slices of burnt toast? (with an emphasis on the word "rubbery and burnt") Was that correct sir?" "Yes, you just said it right", the man replied.
"Why on earth would you want such a dish?" asked the waiter.
"My wife was out of town and I missed her cooking." replied the old man.
"Oh! I see". the waiter answered with a smirk and walk back scratching his head.
To have the country be unified “under one federal head.” For Americans to keep “a sacred regard to public justice.” To create a “proper peace establishment,” which at the time meant a peacetime military apparatus.