Question:

What does Shakespeare mean when he says "Crack of Doom" in Macbeath?

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I really need help!

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8 ANSWERS


  1. He means that MacBeth has a really nasty plumbers butt when he bends over.


  2. The moment bad things begin to happen.

    The crack of doom, its a play on the crack of dawn.

    Try not to make any old world text harder than it is, because its really not.

    Good luck! And let me know if you need anything else.

  3. http://nfs.sparknotes.com/

    go to the website above.

    Select MacBeth, choose your act and scene and it will translate all of the "Shakespearean" words into "understandable" words

  4. I'm not exactly sure; but I'm sure its something bad...just a guess.

  5. I need it in context. Maybe like the sound of thunder or a storm  a bruin.

  6. LOL at AL!

  7. it means "at the striking of the fateful hour"

  8. Sorry-I haven't read Shakespeare since high school-can you please print the rest of the sentence/stanza/sililoque so I can use context clues to help you out?

    I agree with the poster who said its a play on crack of dawn-that was my first thought, but I didn't want to answer without the rest of the sentence...

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