Answer:
A. Exposition ➡️ 19. We meet the little boy and learn he lives in a small village and that he raises sheep on a hill.
B. Rising Action ➡️ 21. The little boy keeps playing tricks and calling 'wolf' when there isn't a wolf, and the villagers get sick of his games.
C. Climax ➡️ 18. The wolf actually comes and steals one of the little boy's sheep!
D. Falling Action ➡️ 22. The villagers don't come running to help the little boy because they don't trust him.
E. Resolution/ Denouement ➡️ 20. The little boy learns a lesson from the other villagers that no one trusts a liar.
Explanation:
Exposition: In a story, exposition reveals and introduces the character(s), the story setting and basic information.
Rising action: It occurs after the exposition. It starts with an inciting incident. It begins with events that will promote a conflict.
Climax: This is the high point of the story. From that point, things begin to fall as problems are resolved.
Falling action: This occurs after the climax. It begins to wrap up the story and leads to it closure.
Resolution: This is the end of the story. At this point, conflicts are resolved and the story concludes.
This is called meter. It is the basic rhythmic structure of a line in poetry. Many forms of poems require a specific meter.
Answer:
He opens up a story told about a Wedding
Because Rome had demanded financial support from England, a nation struggling to raise money to resist a possible French attack. Wycliffe advised his local lord, John of Gaunt, to tell Parliament not to comply. He argued that the church was already too wealthy and that Christ called his disciples to poverty, not wealth. If anyone should keep such taxes, it should be local English authorities.
Such opinions got Wycliffe into trouble, and he was brought to London to answer charges of heresy. The hearing had hardly gotten underway when recriminations on both sides filled the air. Soon they erupted into an open brawl, ending the meeting. Three months later, Pope Gregory XI issued five bulls (church edicts) against Wycliffe, in which Wycliffe was accused on 18 counts and was called "the master of errors."