They went blind by getting there eyes pecked out
The correct answer is A: Unimportant.
An example of an extra in a movie is when the main characters are walking down the street in Manhattan and there are a bunch of people walking in the background. The people that are walking in the background are the extras because they are unimportant for the scene. Extras are there so when you watch a show, movie, broadway, e.t.c, it won't look like the performance is empty. Just think of how the main characters would be walking down the street with an empty road around them. How much more boring than having extras in the background would that be?
I hope this helped! Stay cool! :-)
The correct answer of the given question above would be the last option. Based on the given passage above, the s<span>tatement that best describes Swift’s use of understatement in this excerpt is this: </span><span>He states that sending children to the butcher would be as simple as “roasting pigs.” Hope this answer helps.</span>
The audience members read aloud from books they have brought. The audience becomes actively involved in the play in some way. The actors read or recite lines before an audience with no setting.
In Act II, Scene III, of Romeo and Juliet, Romeo visits Friar Lawrence and declares his love for Juliet. He then asks the Friar if he will marry them:
I’ll tell thee as we pass, but this I pray:
That thou consent to marry us today.
The Friar is shocked that Romeo wants to marry Juliet because he claimed to be madly in love with Rosaline, a silent character in the play. In fact, Romeo was quite love-sick and it was the Friar who tried to convince Romeo to let Rosaline go because she did not reciprocate his feelings. The Friar then goes on to scold Romeo because he did not want him to abandon his love for Rosaline only to go on to fall in love with another woman. However, when he realizes that Romeo is serious about Juliet and that she reciprocates his feelings, he agrees to marry them. He also recognizes that this marriage is an opportunity for the two warring families to be reconciled:
For this alliance may so happy prove
To turn your households' rancor to pure love