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comic relief- Act 1; Scene 1; Line 15 "a mender of bad souls" double entendre-Act 2; Scene 1; line 69 metaphor- Act 1; Scene 2; Lines 68-69 "i, your glass" onomatopoeia- Act 2; Scene 1; Line 44 personification- Act 1; Scene 1; Line 46
Ate- Greek goddess of revengeAntony mentions it in his soliloquy in Julius Caesar (Act 3 Scene 1)
scene 1 act 3
"Oh, you Hard Hearts" Act 1; Scene 1; Line 35 "Give him Some Soil" Act 1; Scene 2; Line 45 Alliterations are the repetitions of initial sounds
In Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar, the murder of Caesar takes place in Act III Scene i. Act III Scene ii is the scene containing Caesar's funeral and Antony's famous speech, "Friends, Romans, Countrymen"
Act 2 scene 2 lines 44-45. "Danger knows full well that Caesar is more dangerous than he."
act 3 scene 2 line 45
He was the very personification of the boy in the book called Where The Wild Things Are. That is a good example because the word means to act or show characteristics of something nonhuman.
Mercutio says it about half way through Act 2 Scene 4.
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comic relief- Act 1; Scene 1; Line 15 "a mender of bad souls" double entendre-Act 2; Scene 1; line 69 metaphor- Act 1; Scene 2; Lines 68-69 "i, your glass" onomatopoeia- Act 2; Scene 1; Line 44 personification- Act 1; Scene 1; Line 46
An act is bacialy a scene in a play, movie, or a mood of a character. 8)
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1)Act IV Scene V 35-36Capulet:O son, the night before thy wedding dayHath Death lain with thy wife.2)Act IV Scene V 48Lady Capulet:And cruel Death hath catched it from my sight.
Ate- Greek goddess of revengeAntony mentions it in his soliloquy in Julius Caesar (Act 3 Scene 1)
act 1 scene 1, line 170
"will you pluck my sword out of its pilcher by the ears?" -Mercutio (III, i) "And death, not Romeo take my maidenhead!" - Juliet (Act 3, Scene 2)