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Question
read the passage from hamlet. act i, scene iii. hamlet: ... but tell why thy canonizd bones, hearsed in death, have burst their cerements; why the sepulchre, wherein we saw thee quietly inurnd, hath opd his ponderous and marble jaws, to cast thee up again. what may this mean, that thou, dead corse, again in complete steel revisitst thus the glimpses of the moon ... which phrases provide clues that sepulchre means \grave\? choose three answers. canonizd bones hearsed in death we saw thee ponderous and marble jaws the glimpses of the moon
"Canoniz'd bones" implies remains in a burial - related place. "Hearsed in death" is associated with death and burial. "Ponderous and marble jaws" can describe the heavy entrance of a grave. These phrases suggest a burial context related to "sepulchre" meaning "grave".
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- canoniz'd bones
- hearsed in death
- ponderous and marble jaws