Answer:
The answer is
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A la recherche du temps Perdue by Marcel Proust
Answer:
"He thinks it will be boring" is the opinion statement i think
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Answer:can you give the answer choices please .
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Answer:
A He doesn't trust them
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<u>Hamlet has a distrust towards women, as well as certain prejudices. </u>He states “Frailty, thy name is women!” which is connected to low morals and weakness.
<u>His distrust quite likely comes from the fact that he learns he can’t trust his mother, the woman who is closest to him in his life. </u>This comes from the fact she has played a role in his father’s murder. He starts feeling dislike towards her, but also towards all the women.
We can see that in his treatment of Ophelia – while he claims his love to her, he also says very harsh words to her later on. <u>He says she presents herself as two-faced, doesn't believe she really is pure, and dismisses her. </u>
Hamlet also states he “will have no more marriages”, underlying he is done with his connection to all women, which also reflects his lack of faith and wariness in females.
<span>Ross arrives and announces that Macbeth is to be the new Thane of Cawdor, thus confirming the first prophecy of the Witches. Banquo and Macbeth are struck dumb for the second time, but now Shakespeare contrasts their responses. Banquo is aware of the possibility that the prophecies may have been the work of supernatural dark forces, as exemplified in his lines "What? Can the Devil speak true?" (108) and "oftentimes, to win us to our harm, / The instruments of Darkness tell us truths . . . — (only) to betray us" (123-125). Macbeth is more ambiguous. His speech is full of what will now become his trademark — questioning, doubting, weighing up, and seeking to justify: "This supernatural soliciting / Cannot be ill; cannot be good" (130-131).</span>