For brave Macbeth - well he deserves that name - / Disdaining fortune, with his braindish’d steel, / Which smoked with bloody execution
Worthiest cousin
The significance is that "geopolitics" is not a PHRASE, it is a WORD. A phrase is a SEQUENCE of words that have meaning.
Dramatically, it establishes the lengths to which she is prepared to go (or thinks she is prepared to go) in order to get the crown. The audience now knows her to be ruthless and evil. They will modify that opinion later but for now it will colour the audience's understanding of all the scenes between the Macbeths until Macduff discovers Duncan's body. Whether the character thinks she will benefit from it is hard to say. Does she really believe in the evil spirits she is invoking? Or is it just a turn of phrase? Director's call, probably.
This phrase is not found anywhere in Romeo and Juliet.
Reverting canon is when dancers start a phrase at the same time, but at different points within the phrase. They end the phrase at the same time. :)
abracadabra
Foliage seems to writhe in fire
The effect of the last phrase of the passage, "it is very cold," depends mainly on
"our brothers"
transitional words
The answer to this question is confident and heroic, respectful, and the Raven.
I can help explain the meaning of a specific phrase, sentence, or passage if you provide it to me.
.By repeating the phrase, "he is an honourable man"
An ellipsis is used when a word, phrase, or passage is omitted from a quote.
and afraid of bees and all that stuff
To emphasize the importance of the event. (Apex)
A glissando is a musical scalelike passage, and could be termed a melodic phrase.
Both, in any case, however, because