I can. I think that answers your question.
Act 1: Big Battle, they meet the witches, everyone goes to Macbeth's place, Mrs. Macbeth talks him into it.
Act 2: Murder!
Act 3: Macbeth is king; Banquo dies but comes to the dinner anyway;
Act 4: Around about the cauldron; adieu Lady Macduff; Macduff joins Malcolm
Act 5: Lady M sleepwalks; Macbeth defeated at Dunsinane.
Macbeth and Lady Macbeth seemed to bring out [B] the worst in each other. They both suffered from raging, uncontrollable ambition. Additionally, Macbeth easily could be manipulated, and his wife liked to manipulate.
Please do your homework rather than asking others to do it for you.
They're being very respectful to each other. Duncan is grateful to Macbeth for his service and wants to give him more honors, and Macbeth says that the honor of doing things for Duncan is payment enough.
They were about many things however, each was associated with things happening at the time
Shakespeare creates a unique atmosphere for each one of his plays.
Two tragedies: Timon of Athens and Titus Andronicus Two histories: King John and Henry VI Part 1 Two comedies: Pericles and Love's Labour's Lost
A conclusion summarizes the main point of an essay
The short answer is no. They take place at different times, in different countries, with different characterizations. You could sort of see Hamlet as a spiritual sequel to Macbeth, but more likely it's just that Shakespeare just liked writing stories about royalty murdering each other.
You can summarize all the information's of a person who just starts in your company by reading all the information's about him first, know the important facts about him.
If you are asked to annotate a bibliography, you will briefly summarize each source.
Act 2, Scene 1: He begins hallucinating and thinks he sees a dagger pointing to Duncan's room. In the Banquet Scene, Act 3 Scene 4, after seeing the ghost of Banquo.
I am guessing that the interchange is that one in 2,2 as follows: Lady M: Did you not speak? Macbeth: When? Lady M: Now. Macbeth: As I descended? Lady M: Ay. Macbeth Hark! Who lies in the second chamber? Lady M: Donalbain. Macbeth: This is a sorry sight. The conversation is usually performed very rapidly with the words almost tumbling over each other. The characters are trying to answer each other but Macbeth is distracted by his own thoughts. Lady M has heard a voice, and wants to find out about it, but she never gets an answer. Macbeth asks who is sleeping in Room 210, but when he gets his answer he does not explain why he asked it but goes on to talk about his bloody hands. They are nervous, their thoughts (and we assume their hearts) are racing to the extent that they are incoherent. Their nervous tension gets communicated to the audience.