Answer:
Sorry, in my culture we dont talk to NOOBS
Explanation:
 
        
             
        
        
        
Lady Macbeth's actions do not reflect the traditional gender roles of the period in which the play was written.
<h3>What were the gender roles at the time?</h3>
- Women were extremely submissive to their husbands.
- Men were responsible for running a wedding.
- Women were not dominant figures and had to deal with domestic affairs.
- Men were solely responsible for matters such as politics, monarchy, battles, among other matters.
Lady Macbeth proves to be a very dominant figure. She is responsible for determining what her husband should do, punishing him when he wants to do something different. In this case, we can say that she is completely out of the gender roles of the time.
More information about "Macbeth" at the link:
brainly.com/question/3562297
 
        
             
        
        
        
B)traveling 
a)not to go out 
are the answers
        
                    
             
        
        
        
When using if and can't they both have the similar "self doubt" aspect in them. Like "If I can do it..." and "I can"t do it." Both of these statements are basically questioning their self worth.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
A). They emphasize the idea that male writers did not face obstacles that women did at the time.
Explanation:
The underlined sentences 'stresses the idea that male writers did not face obstacles' which is the central idea of 'A Room of One's Own.' Virginia Woolf is one of the most acknowledged and well-known feminist writers. It <u>discusses the subordinate place of women in the history of literature. She says that women have been treated like teenagers and their works have not been expressed or acknowledged adequately</u>. The only human whose work is expressed completely is Shakespeare(representative of all male writers) implying that male writers do not face the similar interruption or obstacles as of women. Thus, she concludes by saying that 'women must have a room of their own to write.'