What is society's expectation of women in A Doll's House?
What is to follow what their husbands say?
What does Lady Macbeth break by wanting to become a man?
What is the great chain of being?
Who's opinion of us matters the most? (*hint: 2 answers)
Who are ourselves and God's?
Why does Lady Macbeth want darkness to encompass the Earth?
What is so no one sees the crime she commits?
What does Nora say her dad and husband treat her as?
What is a doll?
What are three characteristics of Lady Macbeth?
*Any of these*
What is sinister, wicked, cold, ambitious, deceptive, manipulative, cunning, smart, independent, bold
What does blood symbolize in Macbeth?
What is guilt?
What spurs Lady Macbeth's immoral ambition? (*hint: what's her seven deadly sin?)
What is greed?
What does Nora eat that symbolizes her deceit?
What is macaroons?
How does Lady Macbeth get her husband to kill Duncan?
What is she questions his manhood?
What does constantly indulging in dark behaviors bring?
What is more darkness?
What does darkness do for those who indulge in criminal activity?
What is provide a sense of security?
Who is Nora's catalyst that saves her from her marriage?
Who is Christine?
What two things does Lady Macbeth tell Macbeth to be like on the outside and the inside?
What is a flower and a serpent?
How does Nora remove immoral ambition from herself?
What is by revealing the truth about her crime to Torvald?
Why does Nora illegally get a loan?
What is to save her husband from stress?
What does Nora realize about her marriage?
What is she is controlled and trapped within a loveless marriage?
How does Lady Macbeth's personality change? And why does it change?
What is she starts off as cold and sinister and ends up frail and sick. It changes as she becomes more and more of a vessel for immoral ambition.
Fill in the blank
We should not let ______ influence our decisions as that leads to immoral ambition.
What is society?
What is Nora and Torvald's "prefect" relationship based on?
What is a facade of society's expectations?