Answer: Cassius has devised a plan to persuade Brutus to act against Caesar.
Explanation:
Brutus is a character from Shakespeare's <em>Julius Caesar</em>. He is Caesar's friend who joins a conspiracy against Caesar.
At the end of <em>Act I, Scene II</em>, Cassius plans to convince Brutus to join a group of conspirators. Brutus is essential for the murder plan, because Caesar trusts him, as opposed to Cassius.
Cassius thus devises a plan to write letters and throw them at Brutus's window. The letters are intended to discredit Caesar. Cassius wants Brutus to believe that those letters come from Roman citizens, which will make him change his opinion about Caesar and participate in the murder plot.
Answer:
she is laughing because she
Explanation:
It is an epic simile. This is because the comparisons are "long and involved". The main difference between an epic simile (also known as Homeric simile) and an ordinary simile is than an epic simile is very detailed and can span over many lines. Where as a normal simile usually is contained within one or two lines.
Example of epic simile:
But swift Aias the son of Oïleus would not at all now take his stand apart from Telamonian Aias,
not even a little; but as two wine-coloured oxen straining
with even force drag the compacted plough through the fallow land,
and for both of them at the base of the horns the dense sweat gushes;
only the width of the polished yoke keeps a space between them
as they toil down the furrow till the share cuts the edge of the ploughland;
so these took their stand in battle, close to each other.
Normal simile:
As white as a ghost
Hope this helps !!
This sentence is a complex sentence, since it consists of one independent clause - <em>the various laws ... leave women very little more liberty or power, in some respects, than the slave, </em>and one dependent clause - <em>which I have transcribed. </em>