what reasons are nerissa giving to justify process weariness
Answers
Portia is obliged to follow her fathers' wishes - she says so. She doesn't want to marry any of the current suitors. She makes that clear by what she says about them. This is her life, her happiness at stake.
PLEASE MARK IT THE BRAINLIEST ANSWER.
Answer:
If your question from Merchent of Venice , then here is your answer my friend
Portia explains why she is weary of her father's plans for her future marriage. Though her father is dead, he left specific rules in his will about who she can marry. Anyone who wants to marry her has to go along with her father's game. This game involves suitors selecting one of three caskets, gold, silver, and lead. Only one casket allows them the right to marry Portia. Additionally, suitors must agree not to marry anyone else, even if they choose the wrong casket. Though many men want to marry Portia, Portia has no right to choose a husband for herself. Additionally, she doesn't find many of the suitors particularly interesting.
When Portia tells Nerissa that she is weary with the world, she means that she is bored by her father's marriage game. Portia has no power in choosing her own husband; instead, she has to wait for a suitor to win her father's game. She is bored of waiting for her future husband to arrive, and she worries that she may not like the man who eventually wins the right to marry her.