Answer:
The aspect that further complicated Jessica's elopement is that she also converted to Christianity.
Explanation:
Jessica is Shylock's daughter in the Merchant of Venice and Shylock's family is Jewish. He is made to seem greedy and vengeful and Jessica's elopement in defiance of her father makes her seem more ignoble as she elopes for her love of Lorenzo and decides to convert to Christianity. This reflects the antisemitism that was popular during Elizabethan times in England. Also, Jessica steals money (ducats) from her father as she elopes and therefore counters his greed but also makes her father angry and he takes out his vengeance on Antonio (the Merchant of Venice) who owes him money.
MY OWN WORDS: Ominous means strange or creepy, as if you have a bad feeling about something.
DEFINITION: giving the impression that something bad or unpleasant is going to happen; threatening; inauspicious.
May I have brainliest please? :)
Answer:
A. Blood is thicker than water.
Explanation:
The actions displayed by Antigone proved that she valued family relationships and would be a great supporter of the fact that blood is thicker than water. First, she accompanied her blind father as he went into exile and finally died. Then, while returning, she saw her brothers, Eteocles and Polyneices fighting and she tried to reconcile them as well. When the two bothers were killed by their Uncle Creon, Eteocles was buried while Polyneices was left unburied. Antigone secretly buried him.
When the King got to know about this, he ordered her execution but she hanged herself. These antecedents prove indeed that Antigone was a firm believer in the adage that 'Blood is thicker than water'. She sacrificed for her loved ones.
Answer:
See below
Explanation:
"Students should not play politics" is a tone-deaf argument used by gatekeeping politicians who shut their doors to the struggling youth. For how many years have students complained about their schooling system, only to be turned down due to a lack of funds? When students try to participate in shaping the world, <em>their </em>world, they're treated like children. Students are expected to attend school full-time without being paid or publicly acknowledged. "Students should not play politics" holds little ground and defense for those who use it. What if a student is <em>studying</em> politics? Shouldn't they be able to use their expertise to contribute to political conversations? All inclusivity issues aside, politics will eventually become outdated if the people who run it refuse to listen to students and the younger generations. Most politicians are old and their views are outdated... why not listen to the people next in line? In conclusion, "students should not play politics" is only a restrictive, weak argument at its very core.