The witches never said "Macbeth, Macbeth, Macbeth". In Act 4, Scene 1, both the First Apparition and the Second Apparition begin their prophecies by calling out, "Macbeth! Macbeth! Macbeth!" Macbeth responds to the First Apparition by thanking it for warning him against the Thane of Fife (Macduff). Macbeth responds to the Second Apparition with: "Had I three ears, I'd hear thee."
In an apparition, the three witches show Macbeth a bloody child that is meant to symbolize the just-born Macduff.
The apparition of the bloody child represents Macduff, who was born by Caesarean section and is the only one who can defeat Macbeth. The witches are warning Macbeth of Macduff's threat to his reign, as he is the one destined to challenge and overthrow Macbeth.
In Harry Potter, apparition points are specific locations where witches and wizards can apparate to or from. To use an apparition point, a witch or wizard must focus on the desired location and then apparate by concentrating on the feeling of being in the new location. It requires a high level of skill and concentration to successfully apparate to and from these points.
First there are no such things as blood witches. Second yes witches do have to breath we are human.
The first apparition in Shakespeare's Macbeth is a floating head that tells Macbeth to beware of Macduff. It says that Macbeth should be on guard against Macduff because he poses a threat to Macbeth's reign.
It's considered the witches cat.
Macbeth says that the first apparition warns him to beware Macduff, the second apparition tells him to fear no man born of a woman, and the third apparition tells him he will not be defeated until Birnam Wood comes to Dunsinane Hill.
The second apparition was a bloody child. It said that no man born of a woman shall harm Macbeth. The third apparition was a crowned child holding a tree. It said that Macbeth will not be vanquished until Birnam woods approaches Dunsinane.
The second apparition tells Macbeth to beware of Macduff, saying that he is not born of a woman in the traditional sense but was instead "from his mother's womb untimely ripped." This suggests that Macduff was born through Caesarean section, indicating that he poses a threat to Macbeth.
The suffix for apparition is -ition.
The poem, 'The Apparitions,' by William Butler Yeats, is about an old man reflecting on life and of coming death. The poem has some humor when he talks of the worst apparition being a coat on a coat hanger.