Macbeth is basically a good man who goes wrong. ... Macbeth has been thinking about whether or not he should murder Duncan. He reaches the conclusion that the only thing that is motivating him (his 'spur') is ambition which he compares to a horse leaping over an obstacle ('vaulting ambition').
This short story “<em>The lottery”</em>is written by <em><u>Shirley Jackson</u></em> and tells about the seemingly harmless village tradition of holding an annual lottery, but with an unexpected ending. The lottery is in fact to get a sacrifice to ensure a good crop. The sacrificed person (lottery winner) must be stoned to death.
Question: Which detail from "The Lottery" best contributes to this theme?
Answer: The children gather stones before the adults assemble for the lottery.
Answer:
D. One Line
Explanation:
A truth table cannot contain a true premises and a false conclusion. It has to be one or the other.
D the assistant principal