Hamlet’s repeated discussion of his mother’s behavior—“frailty, thy name is woman!” —mainly suggests that he: considers women to be weak.
<h3>What prompted Hamlet's Statement?</h3>
Hamlet made the statement above when his mother (Gertrude) married his uncle Claudius shortly after the death of his father.
So, by making this statement he was trying to blame the supposed moral weakness of women as the cause of his mother's behavior.
Learn more about Hamlet here:
brainly.com/question/806658
A. Would be correct because mayor is the subject and lives being the verb.
It's a great way to promote business, get people to find put about your business, earn tons of money, etcetera.
The correct answer is <u>B) unstressed STRESSED, unstressed STRESSED, unstressed STRESSED, unstressed STRESSED. It emphasizes the dreariness of life.</u>
This rhyme scheme is <em>aabba</em> which means that the word "dreary" from the beginning of the stanza <u>rhymes back with itself</u> in the end of the stanza which emphasizes the cyclical, dreary nature of life though the means of using this meter. In other words, the dreariness cannot be escaped.
What Mark Twain is basically saying here is that pilots need
to be of the ability to make judgement calls, and the ability to make good
judgement calls depends on whether or not one is intelligent. He
takes his point further by saying that, basically, intelligence is genetic—one
is either born with intelligence or one is not.
His point is, if one is not born with “brains” (intelligence), one
cannot be a pilot because intelligence (according to this statement of Twain)
cannot be acquired.