They will help Steven tomorrow morning/night/afternoon.
<span>1. Considers appearances more important than quality of character - D. Polonius
2. Weak rather than evil - B. Gertrude
3. Simple, innocent, obedient - E. Ophelia
4. Achieved balance between emotion and reason - F. Horatio
5. no-to-be-trusted friends - C. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern
6. A young Dane who jumps to conclusions and makes resolutions rashly - H. Hamlet
7. Shrewd, practical, and materialistic - A. Claudius
8. Intelligent and idealistic - G. Laertes
1. Polonius is a shallow man, who doesn't really care about what people are like, as long as they behave according to his own standards
2. Gertrude is not evil - she is just easily manipulated into committing bad things
3. Ophelia is also easily manipulated, but because she is so good and kind she doesn't believe evil exists, and when she finds out, she kills herself
4. Horatio is the wisest character in the play, one of the rare ones who actually survives
5. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern ultimately betray their "best friend" Hamlet
6. Hamlet doesn't really think anything through, he just acts on a whim
7. Claudius is a smart man, driven by his materialistic need for money and power, and wants to rule the kingdom
8. Laertes wanted to change the world, but ended up killing Hamlet and dying himself</span>
Well that kinda has a hidden meaning but it has two ways different meanings to what I know.
1) If ur doing nothing at all and just lying around or doing something useless u usually say I'm doing nothing but in fact u are doing something it's just not something to be known.
2) If ur doing doing something that is not benefiting anyone or even yourself that is called nothing.
The correct answer is: The harrowing of hell.
Indeed, the main principle of Christianity is that the only way to be saved is by accepting Jesus Christ as one’s Savior. However, the problem of good people both Jewish and Gentile, who had lived and died long before Jesus came to earth remained. If they were good people, and especially if they were monotheistic believers in God, like Adam, Moses and Abraham how would it be fair for God to let them in hell for eternity? According to several verses in the New Testament, when Jesus was crucified and died, he went down to hell and rescued all these people.
A notable one is Peter 3:19-20: “19 in which also he went and made a proclamation to the spirits in prison, 20 who in former times did not obey, when God waited patiently in the days of Noah, during the building of the ark, in which a few, that is, eight persons, were saved through water.”