Answer:
Macbeth and Lady Macbeth were alike after Duncan's murder in a way that both of their hands were stained with Duncan's blood.
Explanation:
'Macbeth' is a tragedy written by William Shakespeare.
There are similarities and differences between Macbeth and Lady Macbeth in the play. After King Duncan was murdered by Macbeth, one thing that they both shared in common was that they both were guilty of Duncan's murder. They both knew that they were doing wrong yet they committed the wrong deed. Both of their hands were soaked in the blood of Duncan. Macbeth's hands were soaked in Duncan's blood because he murdered him and Lady Macbeth's hands were stained with blood because she tried to remove any proof pointing to Macbeth for the murder of Duncan by cleaning the stain on knife with guards clothes.
This blood stain is what makes Macbeth remorseful immediately after he committed crime whereas the blood draws Lady Macbeth to insanity duue to unbearable guilt of murder.
Answer:
D) 22, 37, 121
Explanation:
All three interior angles have to add up to 180 degrees to be a triangle.
Answer:
c is the answer..........
Answer: 1 The Little Prince is worried that the sheep might eat the rose. 2 a rose and a baobab. 3 The crazy (actually lazy) man did not keep the baobab tree on his planet under control, so it grew so large that it destroyed his planet.
There is another man so busy with "serious" business that he neglected to think about the conflict between sheep and roses, or why roses have thorns...
Explanation: This part is more complicated: 4 The Little Prince wants to see the rose. The rose is temperamental and proud. She tells him to go away. 5 She does not want him to see her crying. (at the end of chapter IX)
There may be other reasons. The Little Prince goes on a voyage that takes him to other asteroids and eventually to Earth.
Answer:
Explanation:
Jenny Staletovich has been a journalist working in Florida for nearly 20 years.
She’s reported on some of the region’s major environment stories, including the 2018 devastating red tide and blue-green algae blooms, impacts from climate change and Everglades restoration, the nation’s largest water restoration project. She’s also written about disappearing rare forests, invasive pythons, diseased coral and a host of other critical issues around the state.
She covered the environment, climate change and hurricanes for the Miami Herald for five years and previously freelanced for the paper. She worked at the Palm Beach Post from 1989 to 2000, covering crime, government and general assignment stories.