Answer:
Hey, hows this so far
Explanation:
I was sitting on the carpet floor, in front of the TV, with crumbs on my cheeks and a half-eaten, chocolate chip cookie in my little hands. A pile of toys surrounded me and nearby my aunt rested in a rocking chair snoring gently, while the clocked ticked by, counting the seconds until my baby brother's birth. At the time, of course, I had no idea there would be another tiny human invading my parents' attention. So there I was awaiting the arrival of my family, not a care in the world, other than sneaking more cookies from the cookie jar. In my toddler mind I knew something special was going to happen, a "surprise", my mother told me as i hugged her before she left that day. I noticed her tummy was very big and there was something moving in it.
In Macbeth, strong words covey all of these thoughts to the reader. The tone for Macbeth's speech is immediately set after hearing of the death of Lady Macbeth. Having lost his queen, and seeing his hopes turn to ashes, the bitter Macbeth now comments on life in caustic words. this type of tone helps bring tension in the play, the strong words show power like the theme and the figurative language adds to this all. with all this dded up the tone comes out as storng and supports the story line.
(mark me as the brainliest if this helped u out)
What is the underlined idiom
Answer:
The allusion emphasizes the size of the faults that Brutus sees in Cassius, which will lead to an honest discussion of the roots of the friends’ conflict.
Explanation:
Olympus is the highest mountain in Greece. Brutus's is comparing Cassius faults as high as that mountain.