At first Martin makes up wild fantasies to brag about his great-grandfather even though he is ashamed of him. However, by the end of the story, his boasting has changed to a true pride in his heritage. ... He leads them to believe that his great-grandfather is like the Indians seen in movies or on TV.
The introduction should introduce your main character, setting, location and time. it should also either introduce the main complication, start heading for the main complication or foreshadow the main complication.
Answer C uses a comma incorrecly making it the answer.
Answer:
Destroying
Explanation:
If you measure the destruction to creation ratio, it's dramatic. In order to create, humans destroy. Examples? Long ago, humans started the "slash-and-burn" technique. It destroyed forests so that man could farm. Even today we still witness the destruction of forests and ecosytems. Man has caused over 160 extinctions of various species in the last decade. Our history is littered with war and chaos. Even from that chaos rose the famous quote- "Rome wasn't built in a day, but it was burned in one." Looking at our history, and even the status quo, it's easy to come to the conclusion- we are better at destruction.
Well the exposition is when Jeremy decides who his enemy is, and describes the details of his current life. Rising action includes his struggle to make an enemy list and talk to his enemy. The climax is when he decides that his enemy list is obsolete. Falling action is when he trashes his list and invites everyone for pie. Resolution: They eat pie. Even if I got the story wrong, all stories follow a suspense pattern that is similar.