The answer is:
<span>In the excerpt, the word “charm” is being compared with Name.
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I hope this helps.
Trisha, you’re over exaggerating! she’s already crossed the road, she’s fine.
The tone of Emily’s speeches in Act III are generally regretful, sad, and sometimes urgent, while Simon Stinson’s tone is rather bitter. In her speech she describes her regret not being in her grave, representing the idea of <span>ignorance and blindness of the people's world. Simon Stinson expresses annoying reaction, but he approves her words and sharply replies that now she understands how cruel and unfair is the world.</span>
The answer is:
There are three ways for a prince to hold a newly acquired state that is accustomed to freedom: ruin it, live there, or create an oligarchy that is loyal to him—and the third way is easiest.
In the excerpt from "the Prince," the author Niccolo Machiavelli makes reference to the three possible ways of holding a new acquired state that is used to living in freedom and having their own laws. The first option is to destroy them, the second is to settle there, and the third is to create an oligarchy that charges taxes but that keeps the state peaceful. Machiavelli suggests the third option is he easiest because it makes use of the state's own citizens and the new oligarchy must owe its endurance to the prince.