1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
Nataly [62]
2 years ago
14

Question 8 of 21

English
1 answer:
Viktor [21]2 years ago
7 0
C. The play’s themes
You might be interested in
What is the hourglass style of reporting? Why would a reporter use this style?
Lyrx [107]

Answer:

The hourglass structure is one such device. A story shape that journalists can employ when they have news to report and a story to tell. Earlier this week, I listened to Christine Martin, dean of West Virginia’s Perley Isaac Reed School of Journalism, describe the form to Poynter’s summer fellows as a useful tool for reporters searching for a form.The best stories often create their own shape; writers consider their material, determine what they want the story to say, and then decide on the best way to say it.But journalists, like all writers, sometimes rely on tried-and-true forms and formulas: the inverted pyramid, the “five boxes” approach, the nut graf story. You need to be familiar with these forms whether or not you decide to write your story in a completely new way.“Formulaic writing has gotten a bad name,” says Poynter Online Editor Bill Mitchell, a veteran reporter and editor. “Done right, it diverts creatively from formula in ways that serve the needs of the story at hand. Tying the reporting, as well as the writing, to the form lends a discipline and focus that produce better stories.”The hourglass was named by my colleague Roy Peter Clark in 1983 after he had begun to notice something new in his morning paper.Clark was a likely discoverer. A college English literature professor-turned-newspaper writing coach and reporter, he used his skills as a literary scholar and his experience in the newsroom to deconstruct the form.In an article published in the Washington Journalism Review (since renamed American Journalism Review), he described this form and gave it a distinctive name: the hourglass. It provided an alternative, Clark said, “that respects traditional news values, considers the needs of the reader, takes advantage of narrative, and spurs the writer to new levels of reporting.”Clark said the hourglass story can be divided into three parts:Here you deliver the news in a summary lead, followed by three or four paragraphs that answer the reader’s most pressing questions. In the top you give the basic news, enough to satisfy a time-pressed reader. You report the story in its most concise form. If all that is read is the top, the reader is still informed. Because it’s limited to four to six paragraphs, the top of the story should contain only the most significant information.Here you signal the reader that a narrative, usually chronological, is beginning. Usually, the turn is a transitional phrase that contains attribution for the narrative that follows: according to police, eyewitnesses described the event this way, the shooting unfolded this way, law enforcement sources and neighbors agree.The hourglass can be used in all kinds of stories: crime, business, government, even to report meetings. It’s best suited, however, for dramatic stories that can be told in chronological fashion. In the right hands, as the following story from The Miami Herald illustrates, the hourglass is a virtuoso form that provides the news-conscious discipline of the inverted pyramid and the storytelling qualities of the classic narrative.

5 0
3 years ago
The excerpt is form a memoir because
Sidana [21]

Answer:

The excerpt is from a memoir because the writer is the main character. the writer creates fictional dialogue. it is written like a news report. it is part of a novel set in the past.

5 0
3 years ago
Which excerpt from the "General Prologue" of The Canterbury Tales tells us that the knight had been part of the Crusades, milita
Nataliya [291]

The excerpt from the "General Prologue" of the Canterbury Tales that tells us that the knight had been part of the Crusades, the military expeditions in which Christians sought to win the Holy Land, is the one that says: " Full worthy was he in his liege-lord's war, and therein had he ridden (none more far) as well in Christendom as heathenesse, and honoured everywhere for worthiness".


3 0
3 years ago
Which sentence uses the underlined word correctly?
Elza [17]

Answer: I am no genius but I'm pretty sure its the first choice.

8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Explain Macbeth’s interaction with the two murderers. act 3. Answer quick my test will be over in 5 mins.
brilliants [131]

Answer:

In the royal palace at Forres, Banquo paces and thinks about the coronation of Macbeth and the prophecies of the weird sisters. The witches foretold that Macbeth would be king and that Banquo’s line would eventually sit on the throne. If the first prophecy came true, Banquo thinks, feeling the stirring of ambition, why not the second? Macbeth enters, attired as king. He is followed by Lady Macbeth, now his queen, and the court. Macbeth and Lady Macbeth ask Banquo to attend the feast they will host that night. Banquo accepts their invitation and says that he plans to go for a ride on his horse for the afternoon. Macbeth mentions that they should discuss the problem of Malcolm and Donalbain. The brothers have fled from Scotland and may be plotting against his crown.

Banquo departs, and Macbeth dismisses his court. He is left alone in the hall with a single servant, to whom he speaks about some men who have come to see him. Macbeth asks if the men are still waiting and orders that they be fetched. Once the servant has gone, Macbeth begins a soliloquy. He muses on the subject of Banquo, reflecting that his old friend is the only man in Scotland whom he fears. He notes that if the witches’ prophecy is true, his will be a “fruitless crown,” by which he means that he will not have an heir (3.1.62). The murder of Duncan, which weighs so heavily on his conscience, may have simply cleared the way for Banquo’s sons to overthrow Macbeth’s own family.

Featured on Sparknotes

Advertisement

XA Roundup of the Funniest Greek Mythology Memes on the Internet | The SparkNotes Blog

A Roundup of the Funniest Greek Mythology Memes on the Internet | The SparkNotes Blog

Everyone loves a good Greek mythology meme, not just because it's a brief reprieve from the Sisyphean task we call life but also because sometimes you just need to see a funny meme about the Trojan War to rationalize the time you spent memorizing all that lore. Sure,…

Powered By Tracker

The servant reenters with Macbeth’s two visitors. Macbeth reminds the two men, who are murderers he has hired, of a conversation he had with them the day before, in which he chronicled the wrongs Banquo had done them in the past. He asks if they are angry and manly enough to take revenge on Banquo. They reply that they are, and Macbeth accepts their promise that they will murder his former friend. Macbeth reminds the murderers that Fleance must be killed along with his father and tells them to wait within the castle for his command.

Read a translation of Act 3, scene 1 →

Summary: Act 3, scene 2

Elsewhere in the castle, Lady Macbeth expresses despair and sends a servant to fetch her husband. Macbeth enters and tells his wife that he too is discontented, saying that his mind is “full of scorpions” (3.2.37). He feels that the business that they began by killing Duncan is not yet complete because there are still threats to the throne that must be eliminated. Macbeth tells his wife that he has planned “a deed of dreadful note” for Banquo and Fleance and urges her to be jovial and kind to Banquo during the evening’s feast, in order to lure their next victim into a false sense of security (3.2.45).

Read a translation of Act 3, scene 2 →

Summary: Act 3, scene 3

It is dusk, and the two murderers, now joined by a third, linger in a wooded park outside the palace. Banquo and Fleance approach on their horses and dismount. They light a torch, and the murderers set upon them. The murderers kill Banquo, who dies urging his son to flee and to avenge his death. One of the murderers extinguishes the torch, and in the darkness Fleance escapes. The murderers leave with Banquo’s body to find Macbeth and tell him what has happened.

Read a translation of Act 3, scene 3 →

Analysis: Act 3, scenes 1–3

After his first confrontation with the witches, Macbeth worried that he would have to commit a murder to gain the Scottish crown. He seems to have gotten used to the idea, as by this point the body count has risen to alarming levels. Now that the first part of the witches’ prophecy has come true, Macbeth feels that he must kill his friend Banquo and the young Fleance in order to prevent the second part from becoming realized. But, as Fleance’s survival suggests, there can be no escape from the witches’ prophecies.

Explanation:

I found this online hope it helps :)

3 0
2 years ago
Other questions:
  • What would your name be if your family had matronymic inclinations?
    6·1 answer
  • I need quotes from "Bystander" by James Preller. And WITH PAGE NUMBERS please.
    15·1 answer
  • For each of the following sentences, tell whether the verb is in the active or passive voice and state the tense of the verb. a.
    9·1 answer
  • What is the plural of drive-in? Use a dictionary if necessary.
    15·2 answers
  • What is the best way to protect against the loss of important files? firewalls antivirus software backup files secure passwords
    14·2 answers
  • PLZ HELP MEEEE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    9·1 answer
  • In chapter 12, Hezekiah says "Nowhere is the imagination less constrained than in a library." In your own words tell me what doe
    11·1 answer
  • According to adam smith, why do prices for some things rise/fall
    5·2 answers
  • In this letter to Paul, the author tries to complete the theme: "Life is what you make it."
    14·1 answer
  • i met kate eigth years ago and we are still good friend . have I.....................................eight years
    9·1 answer
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!