This is a bit of a director's call, but I would gauge from her behaviour in the Mousetrap scene, that she is frightened by him. Her responses are tight and non-communicative: "Yes, my lord." "No, my lord." Her slightest comment results in a savage and cruel reply. " 'Tis brief, my lord." she blandly observes, and "As woman's love." is the vicious reply. From her soliloquy "O what a noble mind is here o'erthrown" we know that she believes him to be mad and dangerous.
They are LIKE OMG
Polonius, Ophelia's father in Shakespeare's "Hamlet," has a complicated view of Hamlet. While he is concerned about Ophelia's relationship with Hamlet and sees it as a potential distraction, he ultimately does not trust Hamlet's intentions. Polonius tends to regard Hamlet as a means to an end, using him to gain favor with the king. Thus, his feelings toward Hamlet are more pragmatic than affectionate.
Ophelia appears to obey whenever her brother or father tell her anything. She's annoyed at Laertes's urge toward chastity, since she suspects him of being a hypocrite, but she agrees anyway. She's very meek, up until she goes mad.
Gravity
Keep moving foreword
transitive.
what was the action Jefferson took toward republican "martyrs"convicted under the federalist sedition law?
newdiv
its an response :)
To drive the plot toward the climax
It is a verb meaning to be guided toward action by moral pressure.
That is an action sentence