Asked by Henry2
                Thank you. I have a doubt on Hamlet's plot.
1) Hamlet's father has been dead only two months, but but his mother, Queen Gertrude, has married her brother-in-law, Claudius, who has now become king.
2) Does it mean that "he had died two months before"? I wanted to rephrase "has been dead". Why is "for" been omitted? for two months?
            
        1) Hamlet's father has been dead only two months, but but his mother, Queen Gertrude, has married her brother-in-law, Claudius, who has now become king.
2) Does it mean that "he had died two months before"? I wanted to rephrase "has been dead". Why is "for" been omitted? for two months?
Answers
                    Answered by
            Writeacher
            
    1) <b>Hamlet's father has been dead only two months by the time he returns home from university, but his mother, Queen Gertrude, had already married her brother-in-law, Claudius, who had become king.</b> 
2) Does it mean that "he had died two months before"? I wanted to rephrase "has been dead". Why is "for" been omitted? for two months?
<b>The play starts two months after the death of King Hamlet (Prince Hamlet's father). Prince Hamlet had been attending university in Wurttemberg, in southern Germany, and it apparently took two months to send a messenger to call him back home and another month for him to make the journey.
During those two months, his mother married her brother-in-law Claudius, and Claudius had made himself king.</b>
    
2) Does it mean that "he had died two months before"? I wanted to rephrase "has been dead". Why is "for" been omitted? for two months?
<b>The play starts two months after the death of King Hamlet (Prince Hamlet's father). Prince Hamlet had been attending university in Wurttemberg, in southern Germany, and it apparently took two months to send a messenger to call him back home and another month for him to make the journey.
During those two months, his mother married her brother-in-law Claudius, and Claudius had made himself king.</b>
                    Answered by
            SraJMcGin
            
    a)  one "but" is sufficient.
He has been dead two months, means he died two months ago. You could put "for" in there, or leave it out.
Sra
    
He has been dead two months, means he died two months ago. You could put "for" in there, or leave it out.
Sra
                    Answered by
            Writeacher
            
    That first one is still not great. I think the problem is that both the dead king and the prince were both named Hamlet!!
    
                    Answered by
            Writeacher
            
    Well, THAT was badly phrased!!
<b>... and it apparently took a month to send a messenger to call him back home and another month for him to make the journey. </b>
    
<b>... and it apparently took a month to send a messenger to call him back home and another month for him to make the journey. </b>
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