According to Hitchcock, using the resource of puzzling the audience is not the core of suspense. That is why he had never directed a puzzler or a whodunit. We can find evidence from this in an inteview he gave for the Hollywood Reporter in 1948, called 'Let'Em Play God', in which he clearly says: "I do not believe that puzzling the audience is the essence of suspense."
Regarding the difference between surprise and suspense, he explains that a surprise is something that produces a fright in the audice from a sudden. There is no expectation or tension before it because the scene has been created to take them by surprise. Otherwise, when a director creates suspense, the audience is prepared to what it will come, because you make them participate in the scene, you make them part of the situation.
Answer:
idhellooooo
Explanation:
hello i am sally sally says hi
Answer:
I did some research, and the only info I could find was that his wife commissioned it to hang next to her portrait and that the artist was an early patron of Washington. Sorry I couldn't help further.
Answer:
I carefully prepared a homemade pizza crust and put on it the very freshest and tasty ingredients.
Explanation:
Why? The adverb, as it says, modifies the verb.
A lot of times, not all the time, they end in -ly
- In the first one "<em>most</em>" does nothing and the sentence doesn't seem to even have a verb. (to run, to walk, etc)
- In the second one it is getting closer, but too is not the adverb
- In the third one homemade is a adjective / describing word, not an adverb
- In the fourth one <em>carefully </em>is an adverb and it is <em>italiczed</em>.
<u>Trick:</u>
- Stacey ran quickly.
What did she do? Ran. How did she do it? Quickly.
Verb = ran
Adverb = quickly
Hope this helps, good luck!
(I typed out a lot more to try and explain it since you said you don't understand it at all)
the fourth one because it has a dependent clause and an independent clause