buderim, moololabah anthing with a population of less thqat 100
A hamlet is a small community within a town. Qualifications for a hamlet vary by country but the best example of a hamlet would be a suburb in a city.
man vs man
It is man vs. self.
Yes. See his speeches when Fortinbras arrives and when the Players arrive, for example.
Hamlet dies because he is stabbed by Laertes with a poisoned sword. It is not stated what the poison is. Perhaps it could be hemlock, but it seems that hemlock is less fast-acting, especially for the tiny dose that Hamlet must have received. (See Plato's Phaedo for an example of death by hemlock.)
Dulwich Hamlet? :D
An example of onomatopoeia in Hamlet is when Hamlet describes a whisper as "The very winds of heaven Whispers in the ear." The word "whispers" is an example of onomatopoeia because it imitates the soft, hushed sound of a whisper.
A hamlet is a small community within a town. Qualifications for a hamlet vary by country but the best example of a hamlet would be a suburb in a city.
Laertes talks with his father, then he leaves the room shortly after Ophelia enters Hamlet is conflicted, brooding, and resentful when he sees his mother Gertrude becomes upset with Hamlet because Hamlet does not like Claudius.
man vs man
To be or not to be. That is the question.from Shakespeare's Hamlet
Macbeth in Shakespeare's The Tragedy of Macbeth Lear in Shakespeare's King Lear Hamlet in Shakespeare's Hamlet Brutus in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar
It depends on what the standards are. For most, Hamlet, written be Shakespeare, meets and exceeds their standards. For example, here is one person's opinion: Hamlet is amazing, one of the best plays written by the best author of ALL time!!
A village too small to have a church
Literary foil is when two characters are very different and their differences help characterize them.For example, Hamlet and Horatio are foils. Hamlet is very indecisive and Horatio is decisive. Horatio being indecisive helps the reader realize that Hamlet is indecisive.
It is man vs. self.
The king is dead, long live the king. What is Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba? [Shakespeare, Hamlet]