Well, he is already Thane of Glamis and finds out from Ross shortly after talking to the witches that he is already Thane of Cawdor as well. He does become king hereafter. Birnam wood comes to Dunsinane in the sense that the English army uses boughs from Birnam as camouflage when they travel to Dunsinane. Macbeth cannot be defeated except by a man who is not born of woman, which means someone who was delivered by Caesarian Section. Macduff, who defeats him, is such a man, and that is why Macbeth ought to beware Macduff.
The first prophecy, that Macbeth will become Thane of Cawdor, comes true when he receives the title after the previous Thane is executed. The second prophecy, that he will become King of Scotland, comes true when he murders King Duncan and takes the throne. The third prophecy, that no man born of a woman can harm Macbeth, comes true when Macduff, who was born through Caesarian section, kills him.
None. This scene is the discovery of the murder by Macduff. Macbeth is already Cawdor and Glamis, but not yet king. The other prophecies have not yet been made.
Macbeth and Lady Macbeth seemed to bring out [B] the worst in each other. They both suffered from raging, uncontrollable ambition. Additionally, Macbeth easily could be manipulated, and his wife liked to manipulate.
I am guessing that the interchange is that one in 2,2 as follows: Lady M: Did you not speak? Macbeth: When? Lady M: Now. Macbeth: As I descended? Lady M: Ay. Macbeth Hark! Who lies in the second chamber? Lady M: Donalbain. Macbeth: This is a sorry sight. The conversation is usually performed very rapidly with the words almost tumbling over each other. The characters are trying to answer each other but Macbeth is distracted by his own thoughts. Lady M has heard a voice, and wants to find out about it, but she never gets an answer. Macbeth asks who is sleeping in Room 210, but when he gets his answer he does not explain why he asked it but goes on to talk about his bloody hands. They are nervous, their thoughts (and we assume their hearts) are racing to the extent that they are incoherent. Their nervous tension gets communicated to the audience.
They're being very respectful to each other. Duncan is grateful to Macbeth for his service and wants to give him more honors, and Macbeth says that the honor of doing things for Duncan is payment enough.
What are the types of backup Explain each?
Macduff's army was approaching, and Young Siward found Macbeth first and they fought each other. When he kills him, the audience thinks that he might survive and fight off the rest. Unfortunatly for him, Macduff was born before his time, and he killed Macbeth.
Act 1: Macbeth meets three witches who prophesy his rise to power. Encouraged by his wife, Lady Macbeth, Macbeth murders King Duncan to fulfill the prophecy. Act 2: Macbeth becomes King of Scotland but is plagued by guilt and paranoia. He hires murderers to kill Banquo and his son, Fleance, in order to secure his reign. Act 3: Macbeth fears Banquo's ghost and seeks out the witches again for more prophecies. They warn him to beware of Macduff but assure him no man born of a woman can harm him. Macbeth decides to kill Macduff's family as a precaution.
The witches promised Macbeth that Dunsinane Castle would never fall until the Forest of Birnam attacked it. Malcolm's army uses brushwood from Birnam Forest as camouflage - so that part of the prophecy is fulfilled. The witches also promise Macbeth that no man born of woman can kill him. Macduff was born by Caesarian section, after the death of his mother - so technically he was not born of a woman, but of a corpse. You just can't trust these witches - though they do tell him to beware of Macduff (that part was good advice).
They're both Scottish and they are married to each other.
Genes come in pairs because Genes are in chromosomes and chromosomes come in pairs as well.
explain how each of the cultural factors contribute to culural tourism?
are cyclohenane and n-hexane isomers of each other?explain
After Duncan's boy is discovered dead, Macbeth kills the King's guards out of rage and panic. Lady Macbeth tries to maintain control and cover up their involvement in the murder. Macbeth is eventually crowned King of Scotland.