Answer: umm look on google
Explanation: and copy paste your question
Answer:
its primary purpose is to entertain its secondary purpose is to inform
Explanation:
In an extended and well-developed metaphor, Blaeser compares the rituals to a loop. In the first paragraph, it is the loops of curly hair that can't ever be brushed and tamed. Any attempt at doing that will cause pain, and fingers can't go through them without getting stuck. She then proceeds to explain that "family, place, and community" are the loop of our identity. We can't get hold of it, we can't unravel it, but we will always be compelled to return to it. They constitute our private "rituals of memory". Those rituals are connected, repeated, and intertwined just like braids of curly hair. If we were to cut them, we would destroy our own identity.
Perhaps try tutoring or study a little harder could help you a bit.
1. Hamlet's tragic flaw is everything enlisted above, except for 'a melancholy love sickness which leads to temporary insanity'. He wasn't in love, not really, so this sentence refers to Ophelia, not Hamlet.
2. Hamlet pretends to be insane so as to 'conceal his attempts to get information regarding Claudius' guilt'. He didn't want his uncle to realize what he was trying to accomplish, so it was easier for him to pretend to be mad so that nobody would pay any attention to him.