C. 1200, cunquearen, from Old French conquerre "conquer<span>, defeat, vanquish," from Vulgar Latin *conquaerere (for Latin conquirere) "to search for, procure by effort, win," from Latin com-, intensive prefix (see com-), + quaerere "to seek, gain" (see query (v. )).</span>
I'm confused, I was going to say b but you already put it down. I'm gonna say it anyway lol
The relative pronoun is ''Which'' because relative pronouns connect to a clause or phrase to a noun or pronoun.
Answer:
Baby girl, or The Pain Inside
Explanation:
This piece is great by the way :)
As evident in this excerpt from Hamlet, "<span>How can this player be so filled with grief and rage over Priam and Hecuba, imaginary figures whom he doesn’t even know, while I, who have every reason to rage and grieve and seek revenge, am weak, uncertain, and incapable of action?", the theme that Hamlet refers to talks about the fear about the possible outcomes of his actions and meaninglessness of life. </span>