It means that when the ghost is urging Hamlet to act "You'd have to be as lazy as a weed on the shores of Lethe not to get riled up here."
Act 1 Scene 2 Hamlet: "'tis an unweeded garden" Act 3 Scene 4 Hamlet: And do not spread the compost on the weeds to make them ranker Act 1 Scene 5 Ghost: And duller shouldst thou be than the fat weed That roots itself in ease on Lethe Wharf
The duration of From These Roots is 1800.0 seconds.
they walk over to the roots
A Banyan tree grows roots from its branches and trunks; these roots are called Aerial roots.
Olivia de Havilland
Yes, this is a metaphor. The speaker is comparing someone's dullness to a "fat weed" that grows comfortably in a place of forgetfulness (Lethe wharf). This metaphor suggests that the person being described is unambitious, idle, and lacking in vigor or motivation.
Act 1 Scene 2 Hamlet: "'tis an unweeded garden" Act 3 Scene 4 Hamlet: And do not spread the compost on the weeds to make them ranker Act 1 Scene 5 Ghost: And duller shouldst thou be than the fat weed That roots itself in ease on Lethe Wharf
The carrot itself is the root.
date tree roots can be 50 meters long
No. grass will continue to regenerate itself from the ground. Grasshoppers do not graze on the roots.
Divide the square root by itself
By its roots
Plants propagating from seeds get their root from the embryo itself. Those developing by vegetative reproduction get roots from the pericycle of the stem.
A number multiplied by itself is the square of that number. The reverse procedure is the square root. You can get help for square roots from you teacher, a tutor, a student who understands square roots, etc.
If you multiply it by itself you get 13. This is what square roots do!
what is square roots?
Even if you cut it down, the roots will still grow back. You'll have to excavate ALL of the roots and the tree itself to get rid of it.