Well naturally, the two people should meet in the beginning. They ultimately need to fall in love so your story can later determine if it’s “fate” or just “love” they’re experiencing. If you’ve been in love before, that should help you write. Never answering the question “fate or love” could be cool too. Leave the reader to decide... but that’s more of an ending lol.
You can make the couple meet online, in person, naturally, on accident, literally however. In my opinion a long distance relationship might solidify the question “fate or love” simply because in a LDR (long distance relationship) the two can be so deeply in love, but so far away. This almost forces you to think “is this relationship fate, or are they just in love?” You need conflict definitely. Provoke the mind to ask this question. You can do it!!
Answer:
f
Explanation:
developing a character through description
Mercenary- a professional soldier paid to fight for a country other than his own.
<span>Indigenous- people or groups that are native to a region
Polytheistic- a belief that many gods control the universe
Logographic- a system of writing in which signs or symbols represent meanings
Cataract- a series of rapids and waterfalls on a river
hope this helped!</span>
Answer:
The necklace. ... The lesson here is if she wasn't unhappy with what she already had, she wouldn't of borrowed, and lost the necklace. Guy De Maupassant tried to convey the theme of “being discontent can bring you problems.” This conflict was represented throughout the story, and theme.