Answer:
B, but read the full explanation carefully. If you have an idea of your own, pick it.
Explanation:
It's none of these. Later on we learn that they are talking about fortune and luck. Hamlet makes a very nasty comment about the nature of luck whom he sees as a changeable woman who takes money for her favors (his words not mine). Rosenkranz and Guildenstern are in the middle which leads Hamlet to make another off color observation.
Given that background, you could almost pick any one of the choices, since none of them are correct. I suppose if you take Guildenstern's initial couplet you could pick prosperity, but I wouldn't be surprised if the writer of this question didn't pick it. The quotation is taken out of context.
Whatever they are talking about is neither the top or the bottom. It is therefore in the middle. But before this speech, we learn that the two students are not doing well. Hamlet is trying to joke with them.
Do not speak about love, desire, or pain in the budget, but it seems to show the limitations that Orpheus has....Therefore, by a process of eliminación...Su answer is "A. the limitations of the power of the music of Orpheus"
The idiom is very important as it shows us a part of humans psichology. It is about jealousy. It happems in our days that eventhough two people may have exatly the same thing they think that the other one has the better one. Think of two gardens , one belong to a person and the second to his neighbour. Eventhough they have the same each of the wants to havethe better one, so their minds create the illusion that the neighbour has the better one
just as a metter of fact it is true that it is true that it looks greener(light comes in a smaller angle)
I don't know about Greek but in Latin there are derivatives (English words that come about from Latin words)