Shakespeare's fondness for "quibble" (pun).
In today's popular thinking about Cleopatra, a Cleopatra allusion would be any girl who gets what she want through sex. A temprtress. A femme fatal.
"Fatal law" is not a commonly recognized idiom in English. Could you provide more context or clarify the phrase you are referring to?
'Fatal night' is the phrase Helen Stoner used to describe the night her sister, Julia, died.
Cleopatra used her "intelligence" and her charms to further her ambitions. These were to keep her country independent and to preserve her dynasty. However, she got greedy and deluded herself into thinking she could rule Rome. I put the word intelligence in quotes, because Cleopatra, made the dumbest most stupid mistake that anyone wanting power could make. She did not know her enemy. Fatal for Cleopatra.
Femme fatale literally translates to 'fatal woman'. It is a phrase used to describe irresistably attractive women who get men into dangerous situations.
FataL Frostii Fatal Nova Fatal Pheoniix Fatal Shotzz Fatal Ecliipz Fatal Magiic Fatal Aquatic Fatal Staabz Fatal Assault
"Fatal woman" literally and "irresistible woman" loosely are English equivalents of the French phrase femme fatale.Specifically, the feminine noun femme means "woman." The feminine adjective fatale translates literally as "deadly, deathly, disastrous, fatal, lethal" and loosely as "irresistible" in this context. The pronunciation will be "fahm fah-tahl" in French.
It comes from the film Fatal Attraction. Glenn Close's character stalks the married man she had an affair with and boils the family's pet rabbit.
Fatal Needles vs. Fatal Fists was created in 1978.
This phrase from Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet" refers to the offspring of two enemies, in this case Romeo and Juliet's families, the Montagues and the Capulets. "Forth the fatal loins" implies the coming together of these two opposing forces, resulting in tragic consequences for their children.
Yes, it can be fatal.
is ishema fatal