I assume you are asking about the Duke William of Normandy who became William I of England and is remembered as William the Conqueror. What I have read about him seems to indicate he was either cruel or kind, depending on the circumstances. The people who opposed him were treated very harshly, but he did things that were surprising, such as outlawing the slave trade.
Nefertiti was not cruel
nope
cruel ruler
William was focused on the battle of Hastings and nothing else, he was prepared and if he hadn't won England wouldn't be the way it is neither the language of English........William was a very kind ruler and unlike Harold encouraged his soldiers to fight not force.
Tacitus was not an emperor. He was a historian.
He was brutal, evil, threatening and cruel. No one would stand up to him because of the personality that he had. He was stern and violent and no one would be-trail him.
None whatsoever, although Hamlet by William Shakespeare contains the quotation "I must be cruel to be kind." It makes a difference, you know.
give example of oxymoron using cruel to be kind
Nefertiti was not cruel
Unkind, or cruel. A lack of kindness can also be apathy or indifference.
kind
no,duke is a human name
Cruel.
cruel
usealy kind
The cast of Cruel to Be Kind - 2004 includes: Melanie Canter as Jennifer
cruel