"Death and bane". Specifically, in Act V Scene 3 he says "I will not be afraid of death and bane till Birnam Forest come to Dunsinane".
Lady macbeth was afraid that people will find out that she was the one who told macbeth to kill king duncan. later, she got guilty, and suicided.
"The sleeping and the dead are but as pictures" implies that they cannot fight back. Macbeth refuses to go back to the room where the murdered Duncan lies, and Lady Macbeth is telling him in her usual contemptuous way that he has nothing to be afraid of.
Repeating lady macbeth's words
The gentlewoman in Macbeth is afraid of Lady Macbeth's sleepwalking behavior, as she exhibits signs of guilt and remorse over her involvement in King Duncan's murder. The gentlewoman is concerned for Lady Macbeth's well-being and mental state as she witnesses her troubled behavior during her sleepwalking episodes.
Macdonweald. Macbeth split him from the nave to the chaps. Don't say the Thane of Cawdor; the text does not say he was captured by Macbeth and it wouldn't make any sense to say he did.
Macbeth is afraid of the dark because it represents the unknown and allows room for his guilt and paranoia to manifest. The darkness symbolizes the moral turmoil he is facing and his fear of being exposed for his wrongdoings. Additionally, the dark is often associated with evil in the play, reflecting Macbeth's own descent into darkness and deception.
"Beware Macduff, beware the Thane of Fife."
Macbeth is afraid of being caught, losing his newly gained power, and facing consequences for his actions. He becomes paranoid about threats to his throne and the prophecy that his own downfall may come from his own ambition.
It doesn't say that anywhere in the play. Also, Macbeth is a male.
In Macbeth, the three witches are referring to Macbeth when they say "Something wicked this way comes." They are speaking about Macbeth as he approaches them, indicating his dark and villainous nature.
Macbeth
Macbeth. She said "Hail, Macbeth!" In fact all three witches say exactly the same thing.