<span>MYSTERY PLAY 1. a medieval play dramatizing biblical events
DRAMATIC IRONY 2. words or actions whose meanings are recognized by the audience but unrecognized by the characters
ALLEGORY 3. a story in which characters represent parts of a teaching, having both a literal and a figurative meaning
MIRACLE PLAY 4. a medieval play dramatizing incidents in the lives of saints
MORALITY PLAY 5. a medieval dramatized allegory in which virtues and vices appear to struggle for man's soul
CHORUS 6. group commenting on the action in ancient Greek drama dramatic irony</span>
Answer: Pistols and revolvers
Explanation: (Dont ask how I know that (;)
Answer:
a. There is one example of a passive voice in the draft. The passive voice is used in sentences 1.
b. There is only one state-of-being word in the draft. It is in sentence 8. In sentence 8, it explains how important workplace fitness is.
c. Sentence 7 contains an expletive. It is the phrase "don't hesitate to." The sentence could have been written as "Please, contact me with any questions," without the expletive.
Explanation:
a. Passive voice: In a passive voice, the action is performed on the subject, who receives the action, while in an active voice, the subject performs the action.
b. State-of-being verbs: are linking verbs that identify who or what a noun is or was. They include "is," "am," "be," "been," "being," "was," "were," and "are."
c. Expletive is an empty word or phrase that conveys no additional or independent meaning.
A. playful
<span>The scene is meant to be funny and the seriousness of the human characters is the classic "straight man" to the chimpanzee's buffoonery. </span>
<span>If you analyze funny scenes / acts, you'll see that there is often a buffoon who says wild things and a "straight man" who doesn't get the joke. This makes the audience feel very clever and it laughs.</span>
Answer:
1. Painters and it's plural
2. Wants it's singular
3. I think it does match