The correct answer is option B. The inciting incident describes the establishment of the central conflict followed by the conflict increasing and a climax. In the inciting incident, there is a dramatic change in the character's life; it generally introduces the character to the conflict and marks the beginning of a problem in the story. This event in the story catches the reader's attention and makes the story more fascinating.
Answer:
The production of Shakespeare's "The Tempest" that would be most clearly an interpretation wold be One that portrays Prospero as sympathetic towards Caliban.
Explanation:
By doing this, this interpretation would clearly differ from the original text in which Prospero behaves like an autoritarian and almost cruel master of Caliban. Caliban even complains that Prospero has taken over his island and enslaved him. An interpretation that showed a more sympathetic relationship between them would provide a different approach to the story.
Answer:
The production of Shakespeare's The Tempest that is most clearly an interpretation is One that portrays Prospero as sympathetic toward Caliban.
Explanation:
Prospero is a character that never had any intention of hurting anyone or to do anything that could be against any person. Caliban is one of his servants and received a fair treatment until Caliban tried to ra pe Prospero's daughter, Miranda, and he became the opposite to him, then in the story, he is not sympathetic toward Caliban, and it would be just through interpretation that he would be portrayed that way.
hairstyle?
O Esperanza is pleased that her mother has tried
something new.
O Esperanza is surprised and unhappy with the way her
mother looks.
O Esperanza likes the new hairstyle and tries to style
her own hair the same way.
O Esperanza dislikes the new hairstyle and bursts into
unhappy tears.
Answer:
Esperanza is surprised and unhappy with the way her mother looks.
Explanation:
Just took the quiz
b. The lone and level sands stretch far away
c. And here were forests ancient as the hills
d. for life s not a paragraph
I think it may mean that he fought for years and rose to the top.
Honestly I’m on the same book.
The phrase in question refers to Odysseus's victorious pillage of Troy after the Trojan War. It uses 'proud height of Troy' to symbolize the city's once grand stature before its fall. Essentially, it introduces the subsequent adventures of Odysseus following this event.
The phrase 'after he plundered the stronghold on the proud height of Troy' from the Odyssey refers to the period following the historic event when Odysseus, the protagonist, raided the city of Troy. 'Plunder' means to rob or loot, especially during warfare. So, Odysseus is being acknowledged for his victorious pillage of Troy, which was a major event in the Trojan War. The 'proud height of Troy' is a phrase used to give a sense of grandeur and majesty to the city, symbolising its once formidable and eminent standing before its downfall. The phrase in question thus sets the stage for describing Odysseus's journey post the war, residual victories, trouble and his eventual return home.
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