Answer the act or process of explaining or understanding the meaning of something
Explanation:
answer:
Write the name of your village
Police station
District
Date-
To
The Editor
National Daily
District Pin code
Sir
I would like to draw your kind attention towards the serious problem of in sufficient water supply in my locality. There is very insufficient supply of water in my locality. As you know water is very necessary for us. Without water we can not do anything like cooking, washing, drinking and so on. Due to insufficient supply of water, people face many problems. They can not live happily. They have to buy water from town. As you know water is very expensive so it is very difficult to buy water to do all things.
So I kindly request you to highlight this problem in your newspaper. I am very grateful to you.
Your faithfully
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Photographic Representation
Clearer audio
Visual effects
Emotions of actresses/ actors can be seen with facial expressions
Viewers are more interested with on-screen dramas
Television needs electricity while radio needs a signal
Television offers more channels than radio stations does
Hale denounces the proceedings because it is clear that the girls are not telling the truth in their testimony.
To denounce something is to explain why you disagree with it.
Answer: Because Lady Macbeth is not sick, she is feeling guilty because of the murders she and Macbeth committed. The doctor can do nothing about it.
Explanation:
Upon hearing the Three witches' prophecy that he would become a king, Macbeth and his wife devise a plan to make it happen. Macbeth murders king Duncan and Banquo, which makes him haunted by guilt. He does become a king, but his life is far different from what he hoped for. Even Lady Macbeth, who had the initiative at the beginning of the play and convinced Macbeth to 'do the deed', gradually becomes weak and frightened. She starts to sleepwalk, see blood on her hands and claims that she will never be able to wash it.
In <em>Act 5, Scene 3</em>, Macbeth demands that the doctor cures her of her delusions. This demand is ironic, in that it is not possible. Lady Macbeth is simply consumed by guilt and is not feeling well because of it. No doctor will ever be able to cure her from her guilt. Macbeth is concerned both because the enemy is getting closer and because of his wife's state of mind, therefore, he cannot accept that his problems are not to be solved over night. He blames the doctor for being unable to help Lady Macbeth, while, in fact, it is only their fault that their plan did not meet their expectations.