Answer and Explanation:
Another example of foreshadowing in Act I of "Romeo and Juliet" takes place in Scene 4, when Romeo says,
“I fear too early, for my mind misgives
Some consequence yet hanging in the stars
Shall bitterly begin his fearful date
With this night’s revels, and expire the term
Of a despisèd life closed in my breast
By some vile forfeit of untimely death.”
<u>What he means, simply put, is that he has a bad feeling about Capulet's party. He senses this banquet will be the start of something tragic - his own death. This premonition of the characters serves as foreshadowing for the audience. They can already infer, from this example as well as other passages, that these lovers' story will end tragically.</u>
<u>Foreshadowing is a technique used in storytelling in which a piece of information is given to the audience. Such information seems trivial at first, but later it unfolds into something more important.</u>
Answer:
This sentence is a complex sentence.
Explanation:
A complex sentence is a sentence that contains an independent clause and one or more dependent clauses. An independent clause can stand alone as a sentence, but a dependent clause even though it has a subject and a verb cannot stand alone.
The sentence contain one independent clause and one dependent clause,
the independent clause is in bold below;
eight luxury residential towers that were designed by Steven Holl Architects are connected on the twelfth through eighteenth floors by enclosed glass and steel bridges.
it has a subject and a verb.
While the dependent clause is in bold below;
In Beijing, China,
it does not make any sense on it own.
An effective argument is established by taking the time to look at both sides of an issue.
Discrediting someone's argument or learning the popular opinion is not a good way of creating arguments, while it is not very subjective to decide what is better and what is worse.
C) is the correct one.
As a professional actress, I believe that C) is the correct answer. A, B, and D are allowed, but not recommended by authors. The directors do have the right to interpret the story any which way they want.