Repetition usually tells us that the someone wants a large emphasis on this word: that it has a significant meaning to them, and/or possibly the whole tale itself.
Answer: When Hamlet becomes sane again, it is Ophelia that goes mad.
Explanation:
In the play, Hamlet has lost his father and is mourning over his death. He encounters the ghost of his father, which tells him that he was murdered by Hamlet's uncle. Hamlet decides to act as a mad man, to revenge his father.
Hamlet's madness is demonstrated in his soliloquies and dialogues. In Act I, Scene V, Hamlet reveals that he is going to <em>''To put an antic disposition on'' </em>- to act a little crazy. This is exactly what he does in Acts I-IV, and other characters, including his uncle, notice the change in his behavior. Hamlet makes silly remarks, such as<em> "I am but mad north-north-west. When the wind is southerly, I know a hawk from a handsaw."</em> In Act IV, however, it seems that Hamlet and Ophelia switch roles. Ophelia becomes mad due to her father's death - she sings sad songs, and Claudius notices that she is driven mad by her loss. Hamlet's sanity has returned, while Ophelia has lost her own.
Answer: D
Explanation: Because the third-person is a narrator of all the book, he knows everything.
<span>D. grave</span><span>
As for this problem together with the options presented with it, the most probable answer and the most likely one to be the correct answer is C. Who
Whose would be referring to be asking as to the ownership of an object or something. Whom, on the other hand, would be more on the person directed to or to who should the action be done to. Who, in this case, would act as someone who would do the act itself.</span>