Answer: The contempt he has for Trinculo.
Caliban uses this word in Act III, scene 2. The passage is the following:
<em> I say, by sorcery he got this isle;
</em>
<em>From me he got it. If thy greatness will </em>
<em>Revenge it on him, for I know thou darest, </em>
<em>But this </em><em><u>thing</u></em><em> dare not, </em>
In this scene, Caliban is plotting with Stephano to take the island away from Prospero, and rule it. He refers to Stephano as "thy greatness" and says that he believes he has what it takes to carry it out. However, he thinks little of Trinculo and does not think he would dare commit something like that. The contempt Caliban has for Trinculo is shown in his use of the word "thing."
what?! what kind of dark question is this XD??
i guess with his hands
A.is
B.was
C.are
D.is
E. were
F. was
You need to make sure you did all the steps first then the last step is revising
Answer:
The sentence that is punctuated correctly is:
1. I wouldn't eat those cabbages if I were you.
Explanation:
We may be tempted to add a comma when we see "if" in a sentence, but we must think twice before we do. <u>We will only need that comma if the clause that contains the "if" is the first one.</u> For example:
- If you see her, tell her to call me.
However, <u>when the if-clause is the second one, there is not need for the comma at all:</u>
- Tell her to call me if you see her.
With that in mind, we can choose the first option as the correct one:
1. I wouldn't eat those cabbages if I were you.