Answer:
sorry we don't know in which class do you read
Explanation:
byyy I hope you got answer soon byyy good day
 
        
             
        
        
        
By arranging the immediate marriage of Paris and Juliet .
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
Laertes resolves to act and get revenge immediately for his father while Hamlet cannot decide or act.
Explanation:
Laertes and Hamlet have one thing in common:<u> they both lose their fathers </u>in the play. However, <u>their reaction is very different</u>. Hamlet, even after the confirmation of the ghost of his father, he hesitates and thinks a lot about who is to blame, and what he should do about it. Whereas Laertes, as soon as he finds out about the death of his father he decides to revenge and he actually does something. 
In Act 4 Scene 5 Lines 109-110, Laertes enters Elsinore Castle decided to kill whoever killed his father, he is resolved to act:
<em>"Let come what comes, only I'll be revenged most thoroughly for my father"</em>
 
        
             
        
        
        
Amy Tan describes several conflicts that she experiences during this dinner. She desires Robert and his caucasian features, and wishes she could be white and have a slim American nose like his. She is unsatisfied, in that moment, with everything that makes her Chinese, including her own features and especially the traditionally Chinese food that her mom is cooking. In the American context, this food seems foreign and strange.
Her mom, a wise woman who knows her well, recognizes this. She softens her reproach with a western gift, the miniskirt, but tells her that she should not feel shame in her heritage, and that she should be proud and confident as a Chinese person. The interesting idea at the end of the passage is that, although she felt embarrassed in the moment by the food her mom was preparing, they all happened to be her favorite foods. This captures the cultural conflict that the narrator internally feels; she is Chinese, and loves many aspects of her culture, but feels ashamed of them when she experiences in the American context.