Answer:
<h3>
<em>I</em><em> </em><em>think</em><em>:</em><em>-</em></h3>
- <em>The</em><em> </em><em>dream</em><em> </em>
- <em>The</em><em> </em><em>life</em>
- <em>Sleep</em><em>ing</em><em> </em><em>dreams</em>
<em>hope</em><em> you</em><em> like</em><em> it</em><em>.</em><em>.</em><em>.</em><em>.</em>
I think Lady Macbeth cares about what other people think. We can see that through her behavior towards her husband. She thinks he is unfit to rule because he is weak, and she is constantly trying to make him seem better in other people's eyes. She believes that she would be a much better ruler than him, if she were only a man. She is also trying to distract people from finding out who the real murderer is by fainting and drawing everyone's attention to her so that Macbeth wouldn't confess to his crimes.
If you want to explain to a foreigner how to learn when to use these words, you can say that the go from more general to more specific (in: more general, at: more specific).
in: for objects inside other objects, or for location in a big context: year, country,
on: on top of other objects, or for location in middle-scale contexts: day, street
at: for location on a very small scale: moment (exact time), at specific address<span />
The answer is D. Sentence 7. When it says "plates may also collide", it is bringing up another topic about the plates. As you read past sentence 7, you notice a shift in topic as you are reading. Instead of plates sliding against each other, the speaker is now talking about them colliding.