The line refers to how a "rotten orange" still continues to look beautiful on the outside, but on the inside it is rotted and disguising. It alludes to how Claudio 'knows' of Hero's betrayal, but no one else can tell.
That phrase means "lots of fuss about nothing"
That would be "Much Ado About Nothing."
I have never heard of "Much To Do About Nothing". The Shakespearean play is called "Much Ado About Nothing", and the name of one of the characters in it is Dogberry.
Much Ado About Nothing is a play. It is not a novel.
hero is not the hero in much ado about nothing, that's just her name!
That phrase means "lots of fuss about nothing"
The phrase is Much Ado about Nothing and is the title of one of William Shakespeare's plays. It means a lot of fuss over nothing.
This line is an example of a metaphor, where the orange is used as a symbol to represent something undesirable or corrupt. The comparison draws attention to the idea of offering something of poor quality to a friend.
Nothing. Milliliters is a measurement of volume not weight.
If you are writing a poem, best to use the word Apple instead. I'm told that Shakespears "Much Ado About Nothing" was inteneded to be called "Much Ado About Oranges," but on discovering nothing rymed with orange, he chose Nothing.
Yes, the phrase "you are talking loud but saying nothing" can be considered a paradox because it presents a contradiction in terms - talking loud usually implies communicating with impact, while saying nothing suggests an absence of meaningful content.
Unknown.
cause she is mean and rotten
"A storm in a teacup" can refer to a huge fuss over nothing. Another alternative might be Shakespeare's (making) 'much ado about nothing'.
All the parts that no an orange.
A nice sharp 2 tone blue flame is ideal. A little orange at the tips is nothing to worry about. If you have much more yellow or orange than that your fuel/air mixture is incorrect.
Spots of you can get orange if you eat to much of something orange likes carrots if not then NO.