This paragraph is all about the impact verbs have in sentences, and how you should use them in your own writing. The implied main idea is: Use strong verbs in your writing since they are the most important!
In the famous Disney animated film, The Little Mermaid, Ariel had struck a deal with the known sea witch named Ursula. This situation appears to be a “deal with the devil”. The protagonist, Ariel, had long been wanting to be at land yet this was prohibited by her father King Triton. Because of this, she decided to rebel after being reprimanded. She fell love at first sight with Prince Eric who she saw on the ship while she was swimming.
<span>The character’s motivation in striking a “deal with the devil” was to fulfill her curiosity and to try and be together with Prince Eric. Because of this it angered her father and Ursula outwitted her by stealing the prince. The benefits of the deal did not outweigh the consequences because the only benefit she got was marrying the prince while the consequences were endangering the entire kingdom and other people’s lives while Ursula had almost gained control over the kingdom.</span>
They were associated with the group called ‘Lost Generation’.
This group was made after World War I. The term was created from
something Gertrude Stein watched the owner of a garage saying to his young worker,
which Hemingway later used as an epigraph to his novel The Sun Also
Rises (1926): "You are all a lost generation." This claim
referred to the lack of purpose or drive resulting from the terrible disenchantment
felt by those who grew up and survived through the war, and were then in their
twenties and thirties. Having seen futile death on such a huge scale, many lost
faith in old-fashioned values like courage, patriotism, and masculinity. Some
in turn became wandering, reckless, and focused on material wealth, unable to
believe in abstract principles. But in literature, the meaning of the Lost Generation is a group
of authors and poets who were men and women of this era. All were American, but
several members migrated to Europe. The most well-known members were Gertrude
Stein, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald<span>, and T. S. Eliot.</span>
Nothing because there’s no Question to understand