Answer:
There are three murderers in the scene. The action occurs at dusk (The First Murderer: "The west yet glimmers with some streaks of day.") The scene happens near the palace, in a park. Banquo and Fleance bring a torch to the scene. The First Murderer manages to put out the light, while all three of them attack and kill Banquo. The scene lasts a couple of minutes only, and the action unfolds very quickly. The dialogue is quick, with short, interrupted lines, which is logical considering the fact that this is a murder scene. At first, while they are waiting for Banquo and Fleance to show up, their language is wordier. But then, right before and after the murder, it is swift and abbreviated, telling us that the murderers are members of a lower social class (The Second Murderer: "Then ’tis he: the rest / That are within the note of expectation / Already are i' th' court.") Banquo's last words are that he is betrayed; also, the warning to Fleance to run away to safety. Banquo realizes in an instant that this is a political murder, and that his son is the next potential victim. So, he wants to protect him. We don't see from the text how Fleance escapes.
Explanation:
answer for plato or edmentum
I would say because people separated from their kind and leading to speaking different. just like how people pick up accents when they go to the UK or other foreign countries.
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Answer:
The author uses a third-person omniscient to help the readers visualize the challenges and hardships the miners faced.
Evidence:
I read this story about 2 weeks ago, but from what I recall, there's a whole paragraph in the beginning of the excerpt describing the miner's condition when they stepped off the boat.
The inquiry process is just that: a process. No one model can encapsulate inquiry-based education and the range it encompasses. We are fully aware of the dangerous line we tread when we try to describe a process that is dynamic; and we must stress that any one description is not the only-or the ideal-model.Our intention is to present some of the important aspects of inquiry that ought to be supported in a successful learning environment. For example, we should remember that inquiry often does-and should-lead to the creation of new ideas. And constructively communicating those ideas within the context of our classroom environments is central to the whole inquiry process.<span>That said, below you will find a basic outline of what the inquiry process includes.</span>
Maybe it's because someone in that class is a bully to him