Answer:
*TITLE*
*BASIC DESC OF CHARACTERS*
*SCENE 1
*TIME, PLACE, BASIC SETTING, ETC.*
*NARRATOR SPEAKING ( If you have one )*
*CHARACTER 1 SPEAKING*
*CHARACTER 2 SPEAKING
*ETC. (Keep making the characters interact until the scene ends. BTW You can have as many characters as you want as long you give atleast a small description of them during the play or movie.)
*ETC.*
*ETC.*
*SCENE ENDS*
(Do as many scenes as you need to until you can wrap up the movie/play)
*ETC.*
*ETC.*
*MOVIE/PLAY ENDS*
(Lets say the movie/play ends. You should make the credits by telling or showing the characters' actors and stuff.)
*THE END*
Answer:
to infer
Explanation:
To imply is to hint at something, but to infer is to make an educated guess. The speaker does the implying, and the listener does the inferring. Continue reading... When you infer, you listen closely to someone and guess at things they mean but haven't actually said.
Answer:
pip
Explanation:
pip=picture in picture some fancy televisions offer pip but so does satelite providers for sports and news fixed but pip for a tv is whatever you program into your tv if you means scenes like plural at the same time, or just by the tv alone to view scenes you must have a built in adapter like a digital anntenna or imputs for adapters like coaxial for cable tv or hdmi for satelite or computer or other devices that use HDMI imput but yes a tv has many scenes but alone its just static scenery or an off air tv like digital broadcast isnt analog broadcast so anntenas dont recieve static in digital like in analog so these days you cant just watch the static like old tvs
Answer:
The obvious answer is B the other options would just be for quality (well not obvious but easy to figure out).
This story is probably about a love connection two people have but it can be, because of a medical condition one of them has but it does anyway but in the end like it was meant to happen one of them dies or falls into a coma which they will never awake from.