Answer:
Lady Macbeth is very sweet to Duncan who is genuinely pleased with her. This reinforces her cunning nature which is heavily contrasted to how women were portrayed back then. Reality is much darker. This is further contrasted in later scenes how she changes roles with Macbeth in terms of gender
Explanation:
The answer is C because the other options are like opinions and C is a fact not an opinion.
Answer:
Charlie is unable to recognize common images
Explanation:
This is what the reader understands about Charlie that he doesn't understand about himself. He cannot recognize common images.
This is evidenced in the first line when he tried looking at the image but all he could see or recognize was the ink, at that point, he thought he needed new glasses.
As Charlie got scared when something was written down as he believed he would fail the test, he tried again but could only tell that he was seeing little points of nice ink around the edges. He still failed to identify the image.
Work done by several associates with each doing a part but all subordinating personal prominence to the efficiency of the whole.
I would say yes, you’re technically not considered “grown” at that age, and you’re still at the point where you wanna hang out with your friends and be children, even at that you could just call it free time if the kids think they’re too old for recess.