Desdemona. Iago says that Desdemona is the most influential person with Othello, so Cassio should get her to plead on his behalf. This sounds reasonable, except that Iago has suggested that Cassio and Desdemona are having an affair, and this will heighten Othello's suspicions.
In the last line of Shakespeare's Sonnet 18, "this" refers to the poem itself, which immortalizes the beauty of the subject. By expressing that the subject's beauty will live on through the verses, Shakespeare suggests that art can preserve and confer eternal life to fleeting beauty. Thus, "this" signifies the enduring power of poetry to capture and maintain the essence of the beloved.
Oedipus may be characterized as practical, proactive, resourceful, and results oriented. He wants to know about the challenges to his city and its people. Thus he keeps himself informed of the galloping advances of the city's declining numbers of people and stores of edible harvests and healthy livestock. Likewise does he keep himself current on the treatment options. For example, he sends brother-in-law and uncle Creon to confer with the Delphic Oracle, and he brings in Teiresias the blind prophet. Once he learns of the cause of his people's suffering, he issues a decree for searching out the perpetrator of an unsolved murder and rescuing the city from the resulting pollution of spilled royal blood.
Francis Bacon's famous essay is replete with opinions and advice such as, "Read not to contradict and confute; nor to believe and take for granted; nor to find talk and discourse; but to weigh and consider." In that instance, and in other opinions throughout the essay, his meaning is not so much underlying as it is explicit. It is always possible, and sometimes useful, to extend meanings to situations not evident in an essay. But when Bacon writes, "Reading maketh a full man; conference a ready man; and writing an exact man. And therefore, if a man write little, he had need have a great memory; if he confer little, he had need have a present wit: and if he read little, he had need have much cunning, to seem to know that he doth not," he is not hiding the meaning under any cloak that needs to be lifted. What you may be seeking, when you ask for "underlying meaning," is a precis: a brief, concise summary of Bacon's message. That, I think, you can and ought to develop for yourself.
The suffix of "confer" is -er.
I must confer with my colleagues
I'd like to confer with my associates.
Conferred is the past participle of confer.
CONFER - software - was created in 1975.
The past tense of confer is conferred.
Donate and confer is are synonyms of give
To confer is to bestow some sort of honor, or to meet together in order to compare views. Here are some sentences.The president will confer the medal of honor on the soldiers.We should confer before we make such a big decision.The author might confer a characteristic upon an inanimate object.
He Conferred me this. You have no right to take it over.
I'll be glad to return your call after I've had some time to confer with my associates.
We could confer to the paper workthat's probably how you would use it !
The confer date of my degree is the date on which the degree was officially awarded or granted.