The answer to your question is D. The People!
Hope this helps you out! :)
Because most of the time it is bad to add your own opinion, unless the paper is about you or someone you know
Answer:
The monologue shows Lady Macbeth does not really believe her husband to be capable of achieving great things by himself. She believes that he needed some persuasion to achieve things.
Explanation:
William Shakespeare's "Macbeth" revolves around the story of how a general, Macbeth moved up to the throne of Scotland. The play deals with themes of betrayal, greed, good vs. evil, appearance vs. reality, ambition, supernatural influences, etc.
The given passage from Act I scene v shows Lady Macbeth reacting to her husband's letter. In the letter, Macbeth had written that he had been made the new Thane of Cawdor and she felt happy about the good news. But at the same time, she wants him to return fast for she believes he did not have the strong will to get what he wants. And so, she will 'talk' him into being brave and go after the things that will make him great.
This monologue shows Lady Macbeth does not really believe her husband to be capable of achieving great things by himself. She believes that he needed some persuasion to achieve things.
Explanation:
Interrogative sentences are the ones who are asking the question.
Some of the mysteries that I have wondered about are The mystery of the Loch Ness monster, mystery about aliens and mysteries about the flat Earth.
List of the question:
Do aliens really exist?
If they exist, where is their place?
Why some people are thinking that the Earth is flat?
If the world is flat, how the sun is moving around it?
Does the flat Earth is moving?
How it is possible that the monster from the Loch Ness never hurt anyone since it is that big?
If this creature really exists, what he is eating?
Answer:
Explanation:
In Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird, Chapter 12, one salient difference between the church of Calpurnia and the Maycomb Methodist Episcopal Church South is that the black church allows the children, Scout and Jem, to remain whereas the white churches are strictly segregated