Dear Sir or Madam,
I am writing this email to thank you for awarding me the first place within your competition. I am humbly grateful to have been given such an opportunity. Let me express my sincerest gratitude for choosing my suggestion as the winner. It is such an extraterrestrial feeling to come to visit the chocolate factory in Switzerland. This is so, as chocolate is my favourite snack and I have never been outside of my country of residence. I have been longing to visit Switzerland, thank you for making my dream come through. I look forward to visiting your factory soon. Additionally, I am seeking clarification and confirmation on two conditions within the prize which was granted.
Firstly, I would like to be given clarification on the date of my departure, what travel arrangements were made for me and the accommodations of my tenor in Switzerland. Finally, it was made mention that I have the opportunity to bring a friend along with me. Could you please confirm if both travelling and accommodations would be free of charge for my friend also. I look forward to receiving a favourable response in a timely manner. Thank you in advance.
Yours respectfully.
The answer is D. A and B are the same reworded, and the fact that will be proven is just something to be argued.
I my view it would be that feeling regret about making the wrong choices is irrelevant and useless; the important thing is to follow one’s heart and avoid choosing one of the roads because it has been taken by the majority of people. Furthermore, the road less traveled is not necessarily the road that has not been chosen by the majority of the people but actually the road that has been chosen for strictly personal reasons, regardless of how many people chose to take it.
Finally, the poem’s metaphor is very Christian, it is very similar to the New Testament verse, Matthew 7:14: “But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it.”
Answer:
Stage directions are the director's visualization of what should happen in the stage.
Explanation:
Stage directions let the actors or the readers know where they should be on stage. There are specific directions such as center stage, downstage left, upstage right, etc. Stage directions can also help in setting the emotional tone, rhythm, and mood of the play for the audience to capture the message and/or meta-message of the play. For the actor/reader, the stage directions can also help him/her in determining subtexts of his/her dialogues.
In the example given, the reader knows <u><em>what ANNIE should do</em></u> (i.e., turns, gazing around at the stripped room, bidding it silently farewell) or <u><em>what emotions need to convey</em></u> (i.e., impassively, like a defeated general on the deserted battlefield.).
When you combine both the actions and the emotions essential for the play, a powerful message or a metaphor will be delivered (i.e., All that remains is a stand with a basin of water) that will have a significant impact on the audience.
<span>A man finds a wallet and must decide whether to return it or use the money to pay for his wife’s life-saving surgery. ... This is a moral dilemma.</span>