Franks new house has an aspiring foundation.
An introductory paragraph must and must not contain these things:
Must-
1. Hook/Grabber - Interesting fact, rhetorical question (not recommended), statistic, or just anything (in this case) relating to what your essay is going to talk about that may make the reader more interested. I suggest that you try and make this a little more interesting, such as something relating to Elie and the holocaust to keep the reader interested.
2. Overview of Support - Write what you will further explain in the next paragraphs so that the reader actually knows what they're getting into. It is vital for any article or essay because it helped ease into the writing without any confusion. You should also include shortened reasoning of why your statement is correct/to justify your claim.
Must Not-
1. Very long, dragged out sentences - This will obviously bore the reader. Long and dragged out/descriptive intros will make the reader disinterested and possibly just outright explain what the entire essay is about, which is also a bad sign because it could be considered repetition (which, yes, consistency is key, but seeing the same thing over and over constantly may annoy the reader). You also want to avoid doing this because it takes up more time than it needs to -- remember this is just an introduction!
2. Anything off-topic or unrelated to what your essay/article is about - This means not talking about yourself (especially if it is an informative essay) or talking about your family and the Holocaust (as an example, but not accurate), (etc.) when that is not the main focus of the essay.
This is about all I can think of for now, if you have any further questions, please PM me. Hope I helped and good luck!
Answer:
C
Explanation:
The following part from the artilce justifies the answer choice:
shakespeare’s early plays were marked by a crude—almost vulgar—style that is so far from what we think of as “shakespeare” that most people have never even heard of the plays, much less seen them performed. his early tragedy titus andronicus is as bloody (and stupid) as any gory horror movie now seen at the cineplex. shortly after his blockbuster success with the early history/tragedy richard iii, shakespeare wrote his greatest plays, the ones everyone knows, at least by title: julius caesar, hamlet, othello, macbeth, and king lear. but great as these plays are, they too often have weak spots. hamlet, as any director will tell you, is far too long—the longest play shakespeare wrote and is full of digressions and long topical speeches that are incomprehensible to anyone but a person of shakespeare’s day and age