one example is in act 2 scene 2:"…O, what a rogue and peasant slave am I!/Is it not monstrous that this player here,/But in a fiction, in a dream of passion,/Could force his soul so to his own conceit…"
Apostrophes - talk show - was created on 1975-01-10.
Hamlet stabbed him with the poisoned sword which Laertes had poisoned to kill Hamlet. He was, in Hamlet's phrase, "hoist with his own petard."
Hamlet's uncle Claudius killed Hamlet's father (called Hamlet Sr.). The ghost of Hamlet Sr. comes back from the dead and tells Hamlet Jr. so. Hamlet Jr. confirms this by re-enacting the murder as a play, which upsets Uncle Claudius.
if you are asking this for, say, a homework assignment, then I recommend you figure it out on your own, as your teacher could find this easily.The ghost in Shakespeare's Hamlet is Hamlet's father, who is dead. In Hamlet, Hamlet's father is killed by Hamlet's uncle. Hamlet's father's ghost (the ghost) comes back to basically tell Hamlet what happened, and to tell him (more or less) to have revenge on Hamlet's uncle.
Laertes annoints his sword in order to poison Hamlet, however at somepoint in the match (after Laertes poisons Hamlet, but before Hamlet is killed by the poison), Laertes and Hamlet switch swords and Hamlet also poisons Laertes.
No words are contracted into apostrophes.
Inches is shown by two apostrophes (").
Only use apostrophes in contractions, and to show possession
A centimeter does not have any apostrophes. Apostrophes are typically used to indicate possession or contractions in written language, while a centimeter is a unit of measurement in the metric system. Therefore, the concept of apostrophes does not apply to a centimeter.
The duration of Apostrophes - talk show - is 3600.0 seconds.
Apostrophes and quotation marks can be used interchangeably.
Apostrophes - talk show - was created on 1975-01-10.
Apostrophes - talk show - ended on 1990-06-22.
Apostrophe has only one name. It's apostrophe. The plural is apostrophes.
The apostrophes when used in the Latin language serve many purposes. These apostrophes are punctuation marks that sometimes serve as diacritic marks that show possession.
Apostrophes are commonly used in English for contractions and possessives. For example, contractions like "don't" (do not) and "it's" (it is) use apostrophes to indicate omitted letters. In possessive forms, such as "John's book" or "the cat's toy," apostrophes show ownership. Additionally, in some cases, apostrophes can be used to form plurals of letters or symbols, like "mind your p's and q's."
apostrophes.