there are different types of language techniques but difficult to find as the text is written in a different way but it is easy to spot language techniques such as repitition, alitteration ect.. other techniques you could find are metaphors and similies you could also add imagery of different sorts as Macbeth uses a wide rande of them e.g clothing imagery, colour imagery ect..
Imperatives Ironymonosyllabic wordsPowerful blood imageryRepetitionPersonification
She is in Act 1 Scene 2 ("Hamlet, cast thy nighted colour off."), Act 2 Scene 2 ("I doubt it is no other but the main: his father's death and our o'erhasty marriage"), Act 3 Scene 1 ("And for your part, Ophelia, I wish that your good beauties be the happy cause of Hamlet's wildness"), Act 3, Scene 2 ("The lady doth protest too much methinks"), Act 3, Scene 4 (The Closet Scene, her big scene "O Hamlet thou hast cleft my heart in twain!"), Act 4, Scene 1 ("Mad as the sea and wind when both contend"), Act 4 Scene 5 ("So full of artful jealousy is guilt it spills itself in fearing to be spilt"), Act 4 Scene 7 ("There is a willow grows aslant the brook"), and Act 5 Scene 2 ("No, no, the drink, the drink!") That's nine of the twenty scenes--she's on stage a lot.
Act III, Scene 2.
act 3 scene 1 lines 147-148 :)
Part of a play (Section) Part of a play (Section)
Imperatives Ironymonosyllabic wordsPowerful blood imageryRepetitionPersonification
There is : Act 1 scene 1 Act 1 scene 2 Act 1 scene 3 Act 1 scene 4 Act 1 scene 5 Act 2 scene 1 Act 2 scene 2 Act 2 scene 3 Act 2 scene 4 Act 2 scene 5 Act 2 scene 6 Act 3 scene 1 Act 3 scene 2 Act 3 scene 3 Act 3 scene 4 Act 3 scene 5 Act 4 scene 1 Act 4 scene 2 Act 4 scene 3 Act 4 scene 4 Act 4 scene 5 Act 5 scene 1 Act 5 scene 2 Act 5 scene 3 x meikaah
Romeo and Juliet hold conversations in Act I Scene 5, Act II Scene 2, Act II Scene 6 and Act III Scene 5.
Act V, Scene III. It is the last scene in the play.
"act IIII scene V" or "Act IV, scene V"
act 5 scene 3
comic relief- Act 1; Scene 1; Line 15 "a mender of bad souls" double entendre-Act 2; Scene 1; line 69 metaphor- Act 1; Scene 2; Lines 68-69 "i, your glass" onomatopoeia- Act 2; Scene 1; Line 44 personification- Act 1; Scene 1; Line 46
Othello is plain-speaking, honest, and forthright.
what is scene 1 barrowed of her necklaced
Act 4 Scene 3
Lady Macduff is killed offstage in Act 4, Scene 2 of Shakespeare's play Macbeth.
Act III Scene VI