No, there are no ghosts in Othello. Hamlet is the Shakespearian play that has a ghost.
Othello
othello
They had a good relationship - Othello trusted Cassio and Cassio respected Othello
I think he dismissed him because he doesnt show any respect for Othello and for anyone else.
The same way I would describe any other Othello. Othello is still Othello no matter what clothes you put him in.
No, there are no ghosts in Othello. Hamlet is the Shakespearian play that has a ghost.
no
no
No, it is personification.
There isn't any
Brabantio is Desdemona's father. He becomes very upset when Desdemona elopes with Othello and accuses Othello of committing witchcraft in order to woo his daughter. Othello denies any wrongdoing and Brabantio warns Othello that if Desdemona deceived her father, she can deceive Othello as well. Brabantio dies from a broken-heart resulting from Desdemona's marriage.
Desdemona does not need any assistance with Othello. She is quite capable of looking after any needs he might have of a wife. Desdemona does have Emilia (Iago's wife) as a kind of maid. She did not arrange this.
yes there is the othello one but i don't know where to sign up?
Yes. Words like 'Quack,' 'Bang,' 'Clip-Clop', and the like are onomatopoeia. Any word that emulates a sound is.
An onomatopoeia is a figure of speech where somewhere in the sentence, there is a any word that imitates the word it is describing. Examples of sound words are:BoomPowCluckDingBamCreakAchooBelchCuckoomoowoofquackbamzapbingtingmeowoinkslapchirpzoinkmumblerumbleonomatopoeia in a sentence:The cat meowed to his owner for something to eat. Meowed is the onomatopoeia.
No, "toiling" is not an onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeia refers to words that mimic the natural sounds associated with the objects or actions they describe. "Toiling" is a word that describes working hard or laboring, but it does not directly imitate any sound.