Want this question answered?
Charged objects don't have an effect on neutral objects, and repel objects with like charges.
What could be the temperature of hot objects compared to Cold objects?
the mass of the objects and the distance of the objects
placement of objects
it will float
Nobody. Just Gratiano.
Bassanio married Portia. Gratiano married Nerissa. Lorenzo married Jessica.
Nerissa and Gratiano have an argument because Gratiano took off his ring which Portia gave to him on their wedding day which was the same day as Portia and Bassanio's, and Nerissa made Gratiano swear or made him vow that he would never take the ring off until the hour of his death. "You swore to me when I did give it to you. That you should wear it till your hour of death, And that it should lie with you in your grave." Act 5, Scene one, line 152 - 154.
Portia.
Bassanio.
Oh yes. She gives Antonio a new ring for Bassanio, saying, "Give him this, and bid him keep it better than the other." It's the same ring, of course, but Portia has already said that all is forgiven. Indeed the ring game was a way to ensure Bassanio's obedience, a sort of Taming of the Shrew in reverse. Portia never intended to part with Bassanio.
Bassanio was a character of Shakespeare's play, "merchant o Venice. He was a man who was in the court of Antonio, a wise man. Bassanio lived beyond his means in order to keep up his personality. borrowed money from Antonio. He was in love with a lady named Portia. In this play many suitors wish to marry her but only Bassanio remained successful
Bassanio
Gratiano is the husband of Nerissa in The Merchant of Venice.
to earn money
They didn't.
Antonio is convinced that he will lose his lawsuit with Shylock and will be obliged to give up his pound of flesh and his life. He asks Bassiano earlier, "You cannot better be employ'd, Bassanio, Than to live still and write mine epitaph." Later, when actually preparing himself to be killed, he has the opportunity to deliver what he believes will be his last words. He says to Bassanio Commend me to your honourable wife: Tell her the process of Antonio's end; Say how I loved you, speak me fair in death; And, when the tale is told, bid her be judge Whether Bassanio had not once a love. He wants Bassanio to tell Portia how much he loves Bassanio; at least that is what is happening on the surface. But what does Antonio care about Portia? He is really letting Bassanio know how deep his love for Bassanio is, in order to get a loving response. Bassanio responds all too lovingly by saying that he loves Antonio more than his wife, a rather unfortunate remark since his wife is standing right next to him. All this is made sense of with the supposition, put forward by a number of scholars, that Antonio has a homosexual attraction to Bassanio.