I agree with what you have the last option because "however" shows opposition which not answering would oppose the previous statement.
1. They predict Macbeth will be Thane of Cawdor and eventually the king. They predict that Banquo will be "lesser than Macbeth, and greater, Not so happy, and yet happier" and that his descendants will be kings although he will not be one.
2. True
3. Lady Macbeth persuades Macbeth to kill King Duncan.
4. Macbeth hires murderers to kill Banquo and his son Fleance to prevent this from happening.
5. The ghost of Banquo
6. He sits in his usual place at the table.
7. His wife and son have been killed.
8. Macduff has gone to England to ask King Edward for help to restore Scotland to how it was before Macbeth became king.
9. Macbeth thinks he is invincible because trees can't march. However he misunderstands this apparition as it is a symbol of Malcom's attack. He thinks this means no one can harm him.
11. True
13. To "be born" meant to be delivered in a normal vaginal delivery. ... So if Macduff was cut from his dead mother's body, he was not born of a woman at all, but was "untimely ripped."
14. Malcolm III
15. Malcolm takes over as king
Answer:
several narrators being used.
Explanation:
Both Grand son and Grand Mother narrate the story.
Answer:
:(not/have) two children to support.
in brackets into the correct tense.
ne ever
e zoo
finds out...
(find out) about this.
(die) unless they're fed.
(run) home if I'd known the football match was on TV.