because his wife told othello the truth that it was iago's plan to seperate desdemona and othello
If Iago had told Othello right out that they were having an affair, Othello might consider that he had a motive for saying so. It would become an issue of "Who is lying? Iago or Desdemona?" and Othello would probably believe Desdemona. But by planting the seed of suspicion and then feeding it by downplaying it, Iago makes sure that Othello is not even aware that it is Iago that is telling him about the supposed affair. He thinks he's finding it out for himself. This way it does not become a credibility issue between Desdemona and Iago.
Iago is, although he is more likely to get others to do bad things than to do them himself. He does murder Roderigo, after egging him on to kill Cassio. He also induces Othello to murder Desdemona.The villain in Othello is Iago as he twists Othello's mind and gets him to kill Desdemona, steals from Roderigo and kills him, kills Emilia, wounds Cassio and ruins his job.
no Iago is. Iago is the planner and causes the conspiracy of the play. iago tricks Othello and rodrigo
Iago's wife is Emilia.
because his wife told othello the truth that it was iago's plan to seperate desdemona and othello
no they told the truth no they told the truth no they told the truth no they told the truth
Othello said that Iago is such a loyal friend to Cassio that Iago told about the fight in a way that looked better on Cassio. Even so, Othello fires Cassio and understands that Iago did what any friend would do.
No. Othello did not kill Iago. He killed Desdemona (he thought he did justice). Then, the truth came out. Othello charged at Iago but was stopped by others at that scene. Then Iago ran away, and Othello killed himself; died upon a kiss on Desdemona.
told is the past tense of tell. told is used to make: present perfect - I have told the truth. past perfect - I had told the truth. passive - The truth was told.
Actually the question should have been, "What does 'Thou told'st me thou didst hold him in thy hate' mean?" It is from Act I of Shakespeare's play, Othello. In modern English it means, "You told me that you hated him". Roderigo and Iago are arguing about Iago's loyalty to Othello. Roderigo says, "You (Iago) told me (Roderigo) that you (Iago) hated him (Othello). For more information, read the play.
With atypical frankness this student admits plagiarising this sentence off the internet.
Truth Be Told - Dexter - was created on 2006-12-10.
Chance that A told the truth: 0.8 (80%) Chance that B told the truth: 0.75 (75%) Chance that A told a lie: 1 - 0.8 = 0.2 (20%) Chance that B told a lie: 1 - 0.75 = 0.25 (25%) Chance that both A and B told a lie: 0.2 * 0.25 = 0.05 (5%) Chance that both A and B told the truth: 0.8 * 0.75 = 0.6 (60%) Chance that A told a lie and B told the truth: 0.2 * 0.75 = 0.15 (15%) Chance that A told the truth and B told a lie: 0.8 * 0.25 = 0.2 (20%)
If Iago had told Othello right out that they were having an affair, Othello might consider that he had a motive for saying so. It would become an issue of "Who is lying? Iago or Desdemona?" and Othello would probably believe Desdemona. But by planting the seed of suspicion and then feeding it by downplaying it, Iago makes sure that Othello is not even aware that it is Iago that is telling him about the supposed affair. He thinks he's finding it out for himself. This way it does not become a credibility issue between Desdemona and Iago.
told the truth
told the truth