Playwrights use stage directions to give more insight into how the characters should be interacting with each other. Shakespeare uses actually very few stage directions compared to some modern playwrights who detail every move a character is supposed to make.
Stage directions help develop the plot because they help the actors and audience physically move in the space to move the action forward. For example, in Caesar we get the stage direction "<span>CASCA first, then the other Conspirators and BRUTUS stab CAESAR". We understand through the dialogue that they are going to stab Caesar, but this gives us the person who stabs first and the person who stabs last. This helps give meaning to the characters because we learn a lot about Casca (he is the most willing to start the violence) and Brutus (he is still hesitating and it takes him the longest to actually be able to follow through). Also, it develops the plot in the obvious way that if this action does not occur, the rest of the play could not happen.</span>
In essence, connotation is the emotions or idea evoked by a word and as such refers to the emotional meaning of a word (OPTION A)
1. rude and disrespectful behavior = <span>One must make a distinction however: when dragged into prominence by half poets, the result is not poetry, nor till the poets among us can be "literalists of the imagination"–above insolence and triviality and can present for inspection, "imaginary gardens with real toads in them," shall we have it. . . (from "Poetry" by Marianne Moore)
This is assuming the bolded word is insolence. Insolence has to do with rude behavior, with someone being disrespectful and not showing appropriate behavior towards someone above their status. Insolence means bad manners.
2. an opening for the passage of steam or liquid = </span><span>The jar was round upon the ground And tall and of a port in air. (from "Anecdote of the Jar" by Wallace Stevens)
This is assuming the bolded word is port. The word port comes from Latin porta, which means gate, and later from French porte, which means door. So when it was assimilated into English (port), one of its meanings is that it is an opening of some sort.
3. the feeling that a person or a thing is worthless = </span><span>Reading it, however, with a perfect contempt for it, one discovers in it after all, a place for the genuine. (from "Poetry" by Marianne Moore)
This is assuming the bolded word is contempt. Contempt refers to scorn, disdain, negative emotions towards someone on the basis that they are not worthy of your consideration. You will probably disregard them as something completely irrelevant. </span>
Answer:
I would say pathos (☞゚ヮ゚)☞
Explanation:
Fahrenheit is the temperature it is in a state that what Fahrenheit and when water freezes 32 degrees when water boils 212 degrees