Want this question answered?
Literally, "With their death they bury their parents' strife." Romeo and Juliet! :)
Literally, "With their death they bury their parents' strife." Romeo and Juliet! :)
meaning of a hero in strife
a combination of the words strife, and trifle. strife meaning difficultly
bury their parents alive
No, it is their parents' strife. In prologue it is written 'with their death bury their parents' strife'. This means the feud between the families is ended when their dearest children die as a cause of their fighting.
This quote suggests that the difficulties and challenges we face at birth are unknown to us until we experience them firsthand. It highlights the unavoidable nature of struggles in life that we might not anticipate or understand until we encounter them.
-noun 1. vigorous or bitter conflict, discord, or antagonism: to be at strife. 2. a quarrel, struggle, or clash: armed strife. 3. competition or rivalry: the strife of the marketplace. 4. Archaic. strenuous effort.
This quote refers to the concept of a recessive trait, where a characteristic is not observable in the parents but can appear in their offspring. These traits are carried in the genetic material but are not expressed unless inherited from both parents to manifest in the offspring.
I guess it means that after their parents die they can't take over the responsibilities so they forget about it.
usefully, their death brings their parents' fighting to an end
strife, it means anger or stress or sadness.