Chelsey Lopez Apush Colonial Era Test Topics: Chapter 1 -7 Causes of Expansion Christian Crusades: control over Holy Land from Muslims‚ exotic delight from asia (silk‚ sugar) Marco Polo: venetian merchant traveler‚ introduced Europeans to Central Asia and China Improvement in navigation tech. Primogeniture: the legal principal that the firstborn to inherit entire estate (property & land) Development of Joint Stock companies: economic arrangement by which number of investors poo their
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HAMLET’S SECOND SOLILOQUY Coming immediately after the meeting with the Ghost of Hamlet’s father‚ Shakespeare uses his second soliloquy to present Hamlet’s initial responses to his new role of revenger. Shakespeare is not hesitant in foreboding the religious and metaphysical implications of this role‚ something widely explored in Elizabethan revenge tragedy‚ doing so in the first lines as Hamlet makes an invocation to ‘all you host of heaven’ and ‘earth’. Hamlet is shown to impulsively rationalize
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How does Shakespeare create sympathy for Juliet in Act 3 Scene 5? By Fahad Khan In Act 3 Scene 5‚ Romeo and Juliet are separated because Romeo is sentenced exile as a penalty for his berserk and regretful actions which lead to Tybalt’s unfortunate tragedy. Juliet is left devastated over the separation with her husband and is furthermore misunderstood by her parents. A soon as Romeo departs‚ Lady Capulet tells Juliet about Capulet’s plan for her to marry Paris on Thursday‚ explaining that he
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powerful soliloquy giving us a unique window introducing a deeper understanding of Hamlet. Both Interpretations give varying expression and emotions‚ however Kenneth Branagh produced a more vivid‚ and emotional recreation of the scene with his superior use of camera angles‚ body structure‚ music‚ and a more fitting setting. The scenery and overall characterization of Hamlet in Kenneth Branagh’s interpretation complements Hamlet’s character and his emotional situation. In Branagh’s scene‚ the setting
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In Act 5 Scene 2 Lines 82-92‚ after the death scene of Antony‚ Cleopatra reminiscences about Antony and begins to describe his appearance and the powerful persona that he carried as a man‚ lover and soldier of Rome. Cleopatra’s description of Antony portrays an image to the readers of what Antony looked like and was viewed as being personality-wise. “His legs bestrid the ocean; his reared arm/ crested the world: his voice was propertied/ as all the tuned spheres‚ and that to friends;/ but when
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Question 1 0 out of 2 points | | | Most people can think at _______ times the rate at which most people talk.Answer | | | | | Correct Answer: | 3 to 4 | | | | | Question 2 0 out of 2 points | | | Defining a computer as "a programmable electronic device that stores‚ retrieves‚ and processes data" represents what type of meaning?Answer | | | | | Correct Answer: | denotation | | | | | Question 3 2 out of 2 points | | | The answer to all of the following
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be referenced in other important parts of the play. The topic of Hamlet’s soliloquy is his consideration of committing suicide. Throughout the speech‚ it is obvious that Hamlet is over thinking and wavering between two different extremes: life and death. "Whether ’tis nobler in the mind to suffer The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune Or to take arms against a sea of troubles‚ And by opposing end them" (3‚ 1‚ 56-60). In this quotation‚ Hamlet wonders whether he should live and suffer the
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Macbeth by‚ William Shakespeare A critical appreciation on asides and soliloquies of Macbeth in Macbeth Introduction: It was such a time when only the witches‚ wolves‚ and ravishers were awake. Macbeth was holding a dagger in his hand. He softly stole in the room where his guest King Duncan lay. But all of a Sudden it happened. He thought‚ he saw another dagger in the air‚ drops of blood at its point. He tried to grasp at it‚ but it was nothing but air. Unable to bear this‚ he cried: “Art thou
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1. Odysseus‚ considered by the Greeks to be a hero‚ us described early on as ‘lion-hearted‚ valiant and resourceful.’ Contrast this image with the picture of Odysseus painted by Fagles on pages 157-159. Look in these pages‚ and elsewhere in the chapter‚ for words and actions that describe a very different kind of man‚ and record them. On pages 157-159‚ Fagles describes Odysseus to be a more cowardly‚ pathetic man‚ than what the Greeks considered him to be. Instead of accepting his fate‚ and being
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Throughout act 3 scene 3 Iago’s manipulation through the power of language gradually destroys Othello’s sanity and takes control over his full mental and emotional state. He does this by using his skills an orator to create an illusion that Desdemona is ‘directly in love’ with Cassio‚ thus attacking his emotional vulnerability. Iago advances his attack on Othello due to his opportunistic behaviour and gradually destroys his dignity‚ putting him into an uncontrollable rage. At the beginning‚ we
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