Are these Romeo's lines you are referring to?
<span>Which thou wilt propagate to have it press'd
With more of thine: this love that thou hast shown
Doth add more grief to too much of mine own.
</span>
If so, I believe the correct answer is the first one - <span>Your love and concern are making me feel even worse. </span>He says in the excerpt that her love adds more grief to that which he already has a lot of, which makes the first sentence the only possible option here.
Answer:
PART A: Which statement best describes how the banker's actions develop the theme of the story? The banker's hasty and thoughtless actions lead to trouble and despair for him. The banker's disregard for human life shows the extent of his lack of compassion for others.
Explanation:
Answer:
anxious and frightened
Explanation:
because he said he was worried and also because he had been rowing for a long time in the cold.
Answer:
"A scratch, a scratch," Mercutio says of his wound before dying.
- <u>Verbal irony</u>
Capulet thinks Juliet cries for Tybalt; we know she cries for Romeo
.- <u>Dramatic irony.</u>
Romeo goes to a ball to see Rosaline but falls in love with Juliet.- <u>Situational irony.</u>
Explanation:
In William Shakespeare's <em>Romeo and Ju liet</em>, the story of how the two forbidden lovers were led to their deaths as a result of their 'illegal' love. Though unaware of their families when they first fell in love, their undying love and devotion to one another made them chose death over their separation.
In the story, the various forms of irony are as follows-
Mercutio's description of his wound that proved fatal is an example of <em><u>verbal irony</u></em>. This happens <em>when what a person says is contrary to what is meant.
</em>
Capulet thinks Ju liet is crying for Tybalt when we as readers know it is not so and that she's crying for Romeo is an example of <em><u>dramatic irony</u></em>. This irony is when the <em>readers know more about the given scene which the characters are unaware of.
</em>
Romeo attending the party at the Capulet's place in the hope to see his love Rosalind but ended up falling in love with Ju liet is an example of <u><em>situational irony</em></u>. This occurs when the <em>outcome of any act of the characters turn out to be contrary to the expected outcome of the storyline.</em>
“They scrambled to their places by the rowlocks / and all in line dipped oars in the gray sea” (Homer 6-7).
In-text MLA citations should include the author's last name and page number when available. The citation must be after the quotation, but outside of the quoted text. The citation should be in parenthesis and not include a comma between the author's last name and page number. The comma is extraneous. In order to make it clear that the parenthetical citation belongs to the quoted text and not the sentence following, there needs to be a comma after the citation - not before.