Access to free basic education is a basic human right as all children need to be educated to be able to survive in our world and many kids can't go to school because they must scrounge for the basic necessities of life to help their parents who don't have work and live in squalor in various parts of the world. But calling it free is not quite right as it's expenses must be paid from our taxes so we are still paying for it. On the other hand, there are those well to do people who can pay for private education so may get a better quality of education and/or those who are not rich may still have private school education for those individuals who need special attention like those with a learning disability but such things should be fought for for the public education system.
No you do not, composting is basically decomposing
Answer: Hamlet appears to be despondent and suicidal at the start of the soliloquy. This may be seen in his earnest wish to die, "O! that this too solid flesh would dissolve!"
Explanation: Hamlet is acutely aware, however, that his flesh is firm and durable, and that, no matter how much he loves it, it shows no indication of melting into "dew."
In the memoir, "An Ordinary Man" by Paul Rusesabagina, he mentions being at risk at line 68 - 69 regarding how easily he could have been a target of violence along with the thousands lost each day, "Anybody with a gun or a machete could have taken these things away from me quite easily."
Another instance of being at risk is lines 78 - 83, where he states that he could have been executed for being a Tutsi sympathizer, because he helped the Tutsi, and it is mentioned earlier in the passage (lines 34 - 37)
Active
Because it is structured as subject, verb, then object