amazingawe-inspiringexcitinghistoricloudmomentouspatrioticspectaculartense
he is retarted and needs to shower bla bla bla bla yes yes yes more
The word segue is a verb. The past tense is segued.
The doctor aboard the Acheron was actually the captain and Aubrey realises this when Maturin tells him the Acheron's doctor died months ago. Realising the French captain is still alive, Aubrey fives orders to beat to quarters to stop the Acheron's captain before all hell breaks loose. While the crew assumes battle, Aubrey and Maturin play some Boccherini showing their love of music.
'changing scene' means in theatre to change the background or sets from one part of the show to another. basically you change the sets from scene to scene if necessary in the theatre production
His mother. She died of grief offstage after hearing that Romeo was banished, as we find out in the last scene.
Lady Macduff is killed offstage in Act 4, Scene 2 of Shakespeare's play Macbeth.
This is a difficult question to answer, indeed impossible, since "additional" means in addition to something else, but you do not say what else. Also the phrase "an unplayed scene" doesn't mean anything. I suspect you might mean something that Macbeth does offstage (which means he does it somewhere where the audience cannot see it) but the fact that he does it is specifically mentioned in the script). Like murdering Duncan, which he does offstage. Or getting his head cut off, which he also does offstage.
The narrator uses words like dark, eerie, and desolate to describe the scene.
Polonius dies in Act 3. Ophelia dies offstage in Act 4; Rosencrantz and Guildenstern die offstage sometime after Act 4. Hamlet, Claudius, Gertrude and Laertes all die in Act 5.
The stage direction says "A Public Place." It is near an amphitheater or stadium from which the shouts of the crowd are heard offstage.
What happens right before the scene ends is that the friar says, "you shall not stay alone till holy church incorporate two in one." What happens right after the scene ends is that Romeo and Juliet get married offstage.
This is Act IV Scene 4 I imagine you are talking about, the scene in which Hamlet makes his "How all occasions do inform against me" speech. Hamlet, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are on their way to catch the next boat to England when they cross paths with Fortinbras's army on its way to Poland.
a captain
If you have a copy of the play, go to Act 2 Scene 2. Lady Macbeth is onstage for almost all of this scene (she slips out to spread blood on the grooms) and spends a lot of it talking. It is difficult to say at what point the murder is actually committed, but it could be at the beginning or part way through this scene. It's hard to tell because Macbeth is offstage doing the murdering while she is onstage fretting. You are possibly thinking of her speech at the beginning of the scene starting "That which hath made them drunk hath made me mad." But it could just as well be the one starting "Alack, I am afraid they have awaked and 'tis not done."
Type their part into a text to speech tool, and have Google do the part with you.
Cpt Willard