Answer:
- It keeps the audience engaged in the plot by suggesting more potential conflict in the story.
- It explains to the reader why Romeo and Juliet will never find the happiness they seek together.
- It provides a clue that something tragic will happen to the lovers later as the story progresses.
Explanation:
- <em>"violent ends"</em> - suggests of death and fighting
- <em>"love moderately; long love doth so"</em> - Romeo and Juliet's love is passionate and Friar Lawrence is saying that passionate love ends quickly
- <em>"in their triumph die"</em> - in the triumph of their love, and their plan to escape, Romeo and Juliet die
I hope this helped with your work!
Answer:
A. Logical flaws in Amena's counterclaim
Answer:hold onmm
Explanation: 23 is the answer I dont know how bu I guss that is
Answer:
Glaucon seemed to think the answer was no. But Paul Feldman sides with Socrates and Adam Smith—for he knows the answer, at least 87 percent of the time, is yes.
Explanation:
Compared with Feldman's argument, the tale of "The Ring of Gyges" is best described as a counterclaim to the idea that most people are moral. The tale is about the corruption of a man, Gyges, that found a ring that made him invisible. One he had that power he saw no reason to follow society's morals and did whatever he wanted to. One could argue that the reason that many people have to "behave" or to act according to the law and morals of a society is the look of others. The judgment that one would encounter should he not follow a certain rule, even if they are "little" things.