Macbeth was very brave at war, therefore he deserves the title of a noble, brave and worthy man. Macbeth and Banquo both won the war and were great soldiers too. All of these factors link into the reasons why Macbeth is referred to as brave. It is stated by the captain.
In thunder, lightning and in rain. When the hurly-burly's done. When the battle's lost and won.
This is a matter of perspective and debate. The witches' motive in revealing this might be to cause Macbeth to take the actions he will take to make the prophecy come true, thus creating havoc and turmoil in the realm. Basically, they may be simply troublemakers. But it is also possible that they are the agents of fate, who act in this way to bring about the future which was in any case foretold.
Macbeth has been crowned king- a glorious position- but he feels empty and worthless because of his actions. -apex
This question assumes that a driving force behind Macbeth's actions was "obsessive ambition". In fact, his character is shown to be anything but obsessively ambitious. When not under the influence of his wife, his thoughts turn towards such ideas as "if fate would have me king, why then fate must crown me", and "I have won golden opinions of all sorts of people which would be worn in their newest gloss, not cast away so soon." It is Lady Macbeth who is obsessed with the possibility of Macbeth becoming king. Macbeth only starts to become evil after he has attained the highest office which his ambition could aspire to, which means that he only became evil after he lost all of his ambition.
One example of a rhyming couplet in Macbeth is found in Act 1, Scene 2, where Duncan says, "What he hath lost, noble Macbeth hath won." This couplet follows a pattern of rhyming lines that helps to emphasize the characters' dialogue or the emotion in a particular scene. Rhyming couplets are a common poetic device used throughout the play to add rhythm and structure to the characters' speeches.
the battle might be won for Macbeth, however for his opponent they have been defeated.
"when the hurly-burley's done."
Macbeth was very brave at war, therefore he deserves the title of a noble, brave and worthy man. Macbeth and Banquo both won the war and were great soldiers too. All of these factors link into the reasons why Macbeth is referred to as brave. It is stated by the captain.
In thunder, lightning and in rain. When the hurly-burly's done. When the battle's lost and won.
One example of an oxymoron in Macbeth is when Lady Macbeth says, "Look like the innocent flower, but be the serpent under it." This phrase juxtaposes the imagery of a harmless flower with that of a dangerous serpent, creating a sense of contradiction and ambiguity.
Scotland
Kofi Annan won the noble prize for peace in 2001
No, Abdul Kalam didn't won the noble peace award.
In 1913... Rabindranath Tagore is the first Asian who won the noble price
he won the noble peace prize but not sure what for
noble thomas