Both Macbeth and Lady Macbeth worry about it. She says, "Why did you bring the daggers from the place?" when Macbeth fails to leave them there. She wants them left to incriminate the guards. But Macbeth worries that they may not incriminate the guards enough, so he kills them.
Macbeth brings back King Duncan's bloody daggers to the castle after he murders him.
"I" said Macbeth, "with the servants' daggers. I killed Macbeth."
Who kills Macbeth and how does his killer fulfill the prophecy concerning not being born of woman
Because she made it clear that Macbeth was involved in the murders of Duncan, Banquo and Macduff's family, and Macbeth was the person they would have to report to. Going up to someone and saying "I understand that you are a serial killer" is not a safe thing to do.
She had no job. She was simply the wife of the main character in Shakespeare's play Macbeth.
Aids
They were worried that their language and culture might die, because english was spoken in schools and at work.
In Act III Scene 4, Macbeth has just heard from his hired killer that Banquo has been murdered but Fleance is scaped. Macbeth likens them to snakes, saying that the adult snake is dead and the young one "in time will venom breed, no teeth for the present." Basically what Macbeth means by this is that Fleance is not dangerous now (but will be later).
Real Macbeth: Wise, strong leader, lead successfully for 17 years. He did kill Duncan but he was a bad king and was running his people into the ground. Play Macbeth: Started as a good soldier, ended a crazy killer who killed his best friend and the king. He didn't even care when his wife committed suicide.
He is planning to hire a killer to kill banquo, he hires two yet their are three that appear.
The leading cause of death in America is heart disease.
The leading killer of bees is diseases; the collective noun is a catalog of diseases.The next important killer of bees is mites; the collective noun is an infestation of mites.Another killer of bees is wasps; the collective noun is a colony of wasps, or a nest of wasps.