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Luden [163]
3 years ago
8

in drama, what are stage directions ? (A)nonverbal gestures between the main characters (b)written comments about how or where t

he action happens (c)a conversation among the actors and the director (d)a map indicating where seats are located
English
1 answer:
ruslelena [56]3 years ago
5 0
I think the answer would be B) written comments about how or where the action happens
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Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd "If all the world and love were young,/And truth in every shepherd's tongue,/These pretty pleasure
Anika [276]

The correct answer is B, inadequate.


The nymph says that IF we didn't grow old, and IF shepherd's always told the truth, THEN "these pretty pleasures might me move."


However, the promises made by the shepherd are inadequate. They will not say young forever and shepherd's do not always tell the truth. She needs more than the promise of flowers and songs. His offers are not enough to make her decide to go live with him and be his love.


She is not insulted by his words, but she realizes what he offers is not enough. She regards the shepherd's offer of love as inadequate. Therefore, the correct answer is B.

8 0
3 years ago
PLZ HELP ME can someone write me one I rlly need it done by today before 11:50pm so plz helpp
matrenka [14]

Answer:

“The Premature Burial” (1844), a horror story written by the master of horror, Edgar Allan Poe, tells the story of a man who is so obsessed with being buried alive that he constructs an elaborate plan to prevent it from happening. Being buried alive was a common fear at that time, and this story played right into public interest.

As the story begins, the narrator mentions a few disasters in history and wonders about the shadowy boundary between death and life. He notes that there are instances in which a person may appear to be dead, but is not. If a person is buried under the illusion that he or she is dead, that person may wake later to find escape impossible.

From here, he outlines several situations in which this had occurred. In one, a congressman’s wife was buried after an illness. Three days later, the tomb was opened to place another body inside, and they found her hanging by the door. In another, a woman was buried by her husband. Another man who was in love with her dug her up to get a lock of her hair, and her eyes opened. In another, a soldier fell off his horse and seemed to die. When they buried him, someone felt the ground move. They dug him up and tried to revive him, but he died when they shocked him with a galvanized battery.

 

After these examples, the author expresses his fear of being buried alive. He claims that these occurrences frequently happen without anyone knowing what is happening or how often they happen. The narrator suffers from a strange illness much like death, catalepsy, in which he falls into a deathlike trance. He is afraid that someday someone will mistake this trance for death, because as his disease progresses, the trance becomes longer. In fact, the last time he fell into this trance, it was for a few weeks.

He cannot imagine what would have happened if one of his family or friends had found him in that condition. He obsesses about death and about what might happen if he were buried alive. To fight off these fears, he tries to avoid falling asleep, but his eyes close of their own will on occasion. Once when this happens, a ghastly figure visits him, and we presume it is death.

This inner fear haunts the narrator so much that he is afraid to leave his house. He renovates his family vault so that it can open from the inside and includes adequate ventilation. He makes a spring loaded cover for his coffin, and attaches a bell to the top of the tomb that can be rung by a long rope that rests inside.

Despite all this, the narrator wakes up one day in total darkness. He believes he has been buried alive as he cannot see and there is a weight on his chest. A heavy wooden cover sits six inches from his face, and his jaw appears to have been tied up as is customary to do with the dead. He cannot find the rope to ring the bell, and he realizes that he must have fallen into a trance somewhere away from home.

He is finally able to cry out and is answered. The men who find him remind him that while on a hunting trip, he sought shelter from the rain in a small boat and he is still there. The handkerchief was around his face because he did not have a night cap and the wood was merely the boat. He had not fallen into a trance at all but rather had slept a full night.

This experience changes the narrator’s entire way of thinking. It makes him realize that it is useless to live in fear and that he cannot allow such thoughts to drive his existence. His catalepsy disappears, leading him to believe that it was all a projection of his paranoia.

At the end of the story, the narrator reminds us that the human mind can be dark, and unexplored fears will consume us. We must not dwell on such things for fear of driving ourselves mad. Although human experience is dark, we have to learn to put these concerns away to live before death comes to take us.

The general subject matter of being buried alive was something that captured the audience of that time’s fears and attention. Poe plays on this fear by reminding them first that we do not understand everything there is to know about illness, and that there have been times when people have been buried alive. This would have sparked a deep fear in the audience who was only just beginning to understand the science of life and death.

The true fear of the story is that of obsession and the way our fears take control of our mind and behavior. We find out at the end of the story that his catalepsy was likely caused by the growing fear and paranoia he had at the thought of being buried alive. His mind was sabotaging him.

The story is one of horror at the circumstances, but also horror at the darkness of the human mind. It took the narrator feeling as if his worst fear had come true to realize that it was all in his mind and that while the human experience is a dark one, it should not prevent us from living for what little time we have.

Explanation:

7 0
3 years ago
How does the narrator react to the “dread sentence of death” handed down to him? He blacks out. He tries to escape. He yells at
Irina-Kira [14]
The correct answer is "He blacks out"
(Just took the test)

Hope this helps!
4 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Amy's promise was that she would study after the movie.
RSB [31]

Noun clauses are words that can act as a subject or an object. In the given sentence about Amy, the noun clause is, that she would study after the movie.

<h3>What are noun clauses?</h3>

The complete question is: Identify the noun clause in the following sentence. Amy's promise was that she would study after the movie.

Noun clauses are the content clauses that are also dependent and provide the implied content and the commented subject. It has a verb and a subject that includes the subordinating conjunctions, that, when, what, who, why, how, where, etc.

In the given sentence, <u>that</u> is the subordinating conjunction. For a sentence to have a noun clause it must begin with subordinate conjunction always. Hence, <u><em>that she would</em></u> study after the movie is the noun clause.

Learn more about noun clauses here:

brainly.com/question/11952871

#SPJ1

5 0
2 years ago
I need the answers in 15 minutes <br><br><br><br><br> What is big and green,as corn and jump high
Talja [164]
Frog? hope this helps
7 0
3 years ago
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