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Lady Macduff tells her son that his father is dead because he has fled and left them without protection, which she views as a cowardly act. She emphasizes that his father is a traitor and no longer cares for them.

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Q: What does lady macduff tell her son his father is dead?
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Why does lady macduff call macduff a traitor because?

Because macduff fled Scotland to team up with Malcom but he does not tell his wife that i why he thinks he i a traitor , however what he WA really doing is raising an army against the Scottish forces (mcbeth)


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8 What did Miss Emily tell her visitors the day after her father's death?

Miss Emily told her visitors that her father was not dead, and she did this for three days.


Why does Macbeth have Macduff's family and servants killed?

Macbeth observes the ghost of Banquo at a dinner. He rages at the ghost while others just see him addressing an empty chair. This worries him and he goes to visit the witches who tell him to beware Macduff. Since Macduff is in exile, he assumed he was safe and put everyone in Macduff's castle, including his wife and children to death.


How does a mute man tell his blind friend that his father is dead?

use brail.


Why did they say that Lady Gaga was dead?

Because some people don't like Lady Gaga and they tell lies to make other people dislike her.


Who did one of the apparitions tell Macbeth beware of?

macduff.


Why did lady Macbeth convince Macbeth to kill macduff's family?

Lady Macbeth does not convince Macbeth to kill Macduffs family. She convinces him to kill the King at the start of the play, but after that she has no input in the decisions he makes. Macbeth chooses to have Macduffs family killed so that he may seize the Macduff castle for his own. The witches also tell him to 'beware Macduff' when he visits them and so he feels threatened by him. Macbeth doesn't actually personally kill Macduffs family either, he hires the same thugs that he hires to assassinate Banquo and Fleance to murder him.


What did Lady Macduff think about her husband?

Answer #1 by Ginezumi Lady Macduff's main concern about her husband was the interpretation that others would give to his flight. She wasn't concerned about the reason that he might have had to do so. The nobleman Ross tried to tell her that she didn't have enough information to pass judgment on the why and wherefor, and that she should await word from Macduff as to the reason. But Macduff's Lady wouldn't listen. When she therefore moved from others' interpretations to her husband's motivations, she opted for madness, fear, or betrayal as reasons for her husband's escape. And so, in comparison to Lady Macbeth, Lady Macduff appeared to neither know nor understand her husband. By way of example, it would be interesting to look at Lady Macbeth's main concern about her husband. She knew him well, and always looked first to a husband's reasons and then to others' interpretations. And so her main concern was Macbeth's kindness. She feared his tendency to choose the morally correct way to get something done. She likewise feared his tendency not to do something that couldn't be done in a morally correct way. Answer #2 by Quailly3 Lady Macduff is mainly concerned with her husband's safety, even though he may be a traitor and he abandoned her and their children. She says to the murderers when they ask where Macduff is, 'I hope, in no place so unsanctified/That such as thou may find him'. She hopes that he is safe from the murderers even as she is threatened.


How does Macbeth's first meeting with the witches tempt him and Lady Macbeth?

The witches' prophecies all come true. Indeed Macbeth should beware Macduff because Macduff is the one who kills him, the one who is not of woman born. The forest of Birnam Wood (or part of it anyway) does travel to Dunsinane before the final battle.


What does Malcolm tell Macduff to do upon hearing about the slaughter of his family?

Malcolm advises Macduff to go out and fight to help place Malcolm on the throne. All Malcolm sees in Macduff's suffering is an opportunity to gain an ally.


Why can't the sergeant captain go on with his tale in Macbeth?

You must be talking about when Macduff discovers that Duncan has been murdered, and Lady M shows up in her nightie wondering what happened. This is the only time the two of them are on stage at the same time. MacDuff says, "The repetition, in a woman's ear, would murder as it fell."It sounds likehe thinks that if he tells her that the king is lying in a pool of blood upstairs, she will die of fright/shock/embarassment. This is of course ridiculous if you know anything about Lady Macbeth. But Macduff doesn't really believe it anyway since he immediately thereafter says to Banquo "O, Banquo, Banquo, our royal master's murder'd!" while Lady Macbeth is standing right there. Clearly there is some kind of silly custom here that you cannot tell a woman bad news toher face, but it is OK to let her overhear when you tell someone else. In any case, Lady Macbeth's next remark "What, in our house?" is telling and takes Macduff and Banquo aback. The king has been killed and she is worried about stains on the carpet.