Answer:
Amusement, especially as expressed in laughter.
Explanation:
I searched it up on Google. -w-
Answer:
Summary: Act 1, scene 6
Duncan, the Scottish lords, and their attendants arrive outside Macbeth’s castle. Duncan praises the castle’s pleasant environment, and he thanks Lady Macbeth, who has emerged to greet him, for her hospitality. She replies that it is her duty to be hospitable since she and her husband owe so much to their king. Duncan then asks to be taken inside to Macbeth, whom he professes to love dearly.
https://www.sparknotes.com/shakespeare/macbeth/section2/
Explanation:
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I think that the answer to this question is B-Cower
Answer:
The correct answers are C and D.
Explanation:
The climax in a literary work is the most intense moment in the development of an action, a decisive, turning point in relationships, clashes between literary heroes or between a hero and circumstances. The climax reveals the acuteness of the conflict described in the plot of the work. The climax is best found in works of epic and dramatic genres.
In a novel, the climax is usually moved closer to the finale, and is a contrasting situation in relation to an unexpected denouement; in a novel or drama, the denouement after the climax occurs gradually.
The answer is b. A literary or contextual symbol can be setting, character, action, name, or anything else in a work that maintains its literal significance while suggesting other meanings.