Answer: dreams and ambition by using metaphors.
Explanation: As you know, a metaphor is acomparison between things that are not related with each other at first sight, that is why that In the given excerpt from Act II of "Hamlet" by William Shakespeare, we can see the use of metaphors to compare and describe dreams (by comparing them to ambition and shadow: "Which dreams, indeed, are ambition" and "A dream itself is but a shadow") and ambition (by comparing it to a shadow's that can be: "and I hold ambition of so airy and light a quality that it is but a shadow’s shadow". Hope this helps.
<span>a.
</span>Wealth
In “Kaddo’s Wall,” the main character,
Kaddo, had a surplus of corn that was so great he did not know what really to do with
it. The one thing he knew for certain, however, is
that he did not want to share his corn with those less fortunate. Instead he has the corn made into flour and
the flour made into bricks with which he builds a wall around his house. The idea that Kaddo had so much corn that he
could use a life-sustaining substance to build a wall is quite opulent. Thus, because it is with (and out of) his
wealth that the wall is made, the wall symbolizes wealth.
Mom made a pie for for desert
Answer:
"The Jilting of Granny Weatherall" takes place in the bedroom where Granny Weatherall is dying.
Answer:
The Witches appear to be women, yet they have beards like men, and while they initially appear as real to Macbeth and Banquo as any other person stood before them, they soon after vanish into thin air without warning, leaving them to question their own judgemen
Explanation:
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