One of the other moments of dramatic irony in act 4 is when Juliet tells her father in scene 2 that she will forever more be ruled by him and do what he says. This is dramatic irony because the audience knows she plans on faking her death to run away, but Capulet doesn't. His happiness and excitement to go forward with the wedding builds up the act before becoming dramatic again.
The next example is when Juliet's family discovers her dead in scene 4. The audience knows that she has taken the potion to just appear dead, but this scene gives a lot of drama because the audience gets to see how her family reacts and that they actually do care about her (especially her father).
There are different evaluative questions that we can ask to that excerpt. But, one crucial point must bind these questions. The questions have to be personal. One example could be:
According to the excerpt, do you think Mr. Yallow has to be held responsible for the actions of Graciella?
Answer:In Kafka's The Metamorphosis, Mr. Samsa is in debt and unemployed until his son Gregor, the protagonist, becomes an insect. Once Gregor can no longer work, Mr. Samsa gets a job.
Explanation:
Answer:
The writer wants to strengthen his or her argument with an expert opinion.
Answer: He has a choice - one OR the other- as he cannot "travel both." The fork in the road then represents a stage in his life and even though he has tried to envision what the road he does NOT take will be like by considering it up "To where it bent in the undergrowth," he decides to take "the other."
Explanation: