A noun formed from a verb or corresponding to a verb is called verbal noun
The correct answer is:
The skull of Yorik simbolizes Hamlet's obsession with death and decay in act 5.
In the Act 5 Hamlet visits the grave yard and foinds the skull of a man who worked for his father and who he knew as a child, it brings good memories of Hamlet`s childhood when all was well.
Hamlet remembers the dead in the graveyard. "Alas, poor Yorick," exclaimsHamlet, as he recalls that Yorick was "a fellow of infinite jest, of most excellent fancy," one who "hath borne [Hamlet] on his back a thousand times" (5.1.190-191; 191-192; 192-193).
It would be, <span>enticed.</span>
True...I think. Yeah, don't hold me on that. I'm honestly guessing, and the good news is it's like 50/50.
A) Aviod Responsibility and B.) Bargain with God -------- Now, instead of pleading for more time before his demise, he wishes for a time limit on
his suffering. He pleads to God requesting that, after spending a thousand or even a hundred
thousand years in hell, he might be saved from his misery.