In Hamlet, when Gertrude mentions that Hamlet is bending his eye on vacancy, she means that he is staring at things that aren't there.
The lines from the play are as follows:
That you do bend your eye on vacancy
And with th' incorporal air do hold discourse?
So, he is seeing and talking to nothing (although we know he sees a ghost)... basically, she thinks he is hallucinating.
they missed
Punishment should be similar to the crime committed.
i think its valid...
go to 4nation-elements.webs.com to learn to bend even blood bending!!!!!!!! no, but he can soul bend
The University of Notre Dame is in South Bend, Indiana.
Hamlet sees his father's ghost, but the ghost is invisible to Gertrude.
A word that can mean the availability of a room is a vacancy.
Vacancy means that there is an opening... so a sign on a building might mean there is an apartment for rent, at a hotel that they have rooms available, and in your mouth might mean there is a tooth missing.
Eyeglasses refract or bend light rays to focus them onto the retina at the back of the eye. This helps to correct vision problems such as nearsightedness, farsightedness, and astigmatism by ensuring that light entering the eye is properly focused.
The Lens is the part of the eye that bends light rays .
The word 'vacancy' can encompass more than the word 'jobs'. While the word 'vacancy' could mean that a company has a job available, it could also be used to refer to an open hotel room or apartment.
Vacancy is a noun.
The cornea is the transparent layer in the eye that helps to bend light as it enters the eye. It is the outermost layer of the eye and plays a significant role in focusing light onto the retina for clear vision.
keep an eye out and he will Chloroform may be necessary ;)
The object pulled on by ciliary muscles to bend light is the lens of the eye. The ciliary muscles change the shape of the lens, which allows the eye to focus on objects at different distances.
I wanted to stay at a motel, but the one I went to didn't have a vacancy.
"Vacancies" is the correct plural form of "vacancy".