explain the ending of the story
Depends on how many pieces you cut the loaves in.
The story "Witches Loaves" is about an elderly woman who owns a bakery. A few times a week, an older man comes in and buys two stale loaves of bread. The woman assumes it's because he is poor. One day, she decides to put butter on the bread, which makes the man upset when he realizes it. Come to find out, he uses the stale bread crumbs to erase pencil lines on his architectural drawings. The lesson here is, things are not always what they seem.
ome collective nouns for loaves are a batch of loaves or a stack of loaves.
There is no one set answer to this- but I would make a guess. Things that are "bewitched" sometimes would have results that you did not expect. In a similar manner, the lady at the bakery thought that buttering the bread would have one effect, when it had another effect entirely.
Hecate wants the witches to create a magical potion to deceive Macbeth and lead him to his downfall. She wants them to use their powers to manipulate Macbeth into feeling overconfident and secure, which will ultimately result in his defeat.
50+50+16
Yes, the word 'loaves' is a collective noun for loaves of bread.
There is not collective noun for the word 'loaf'. A collective noun is a word for a group of things; the noun loaf is a singular, one loaf. The plural noun is 'loaves'. Some collective nouns for loaves are a batch of loaves or a stack of loaves. Other collective nouns for loaves would be a word suitable for the context of the loaves; for example a basket of loaves, a shelf of loaves, a case of loaves, etc.
In Macbeth, the ingredients "eye of newt and toe of frog" in the witches' potion symbolize the supernatural and dark nature of their magic. These ingredients are used to create a sense of mystery and foreboding, emphasizing the witches' connection to the supernatural world and their ability to manipulate fate.
ome collective nouns for loaves are a batch of loaves or a stack of loaves.
I have two loaves of bread.
Loaves has one syllable.