It's part of Freytag's pyramid: exposition ---> rising action ---> climax ---> falling action ---> denouement.
The exposition would be like the introduction and the denouement would be the resolution for sure. I think the climax would be the turning point so the rising action would be the complications. It might be vice versa. I'm not 100% sure which one goes with which.
Answer:
Throughout the course of The Charge of The Light Brigade (a poem the based the Battle of Balaclava during the Crimean War), Lord Alfred Tennyson uses many poetic techniques such as imagery, intertextuality, rhyming, and meter to highlight loyalty leads to sacrifice.
Explanation:
I think this is right, but don't quote me on this
Answer:
Julie judges people both by their words and by their actions.
Explanation:
Parallelism refers to the use of sentence components that are grammatically identical or similar in structure, sound, meaning, or meter. It is considered to be one of the fundamental principles of grammar and rhetoric, adding symmetry, effectiveness, and balance to the text. Examples of parallelism can be found in literary works and everyday conversations alike. A well-known example of parallelism is the Latin saying translated as<em> I </em><u><em>came</em></u><em>, I </em><u><em>saw</em></u><em>, I </em><u><em>conquered</em></u><em>.</em> Here we have the repetition of the past simple tense.
Two sentences we were given are a good example of the presence and the lack of parallelism. There is no parallelism in <em>Julie judges people both by what they say and by their actions. </em>It would've been better had the sentence said <em>Julie judges people both </em><u><em>by what they say</em></u><em> and </em><u><em>by what they do</em></u><em>.</em> There we have identical structures. <em>Julie judges people both </em><u><em>by their words</em></u><em> and </em><u><em>by their actions</em></u> is a good example of parallelism.
Fish is to school and wolf is to pack. :D
The gulls are tossed paper in a storm, flashes of white in the grey, tumbling as they struggle against the gale. Beneath them the sea rises as great mountains, anger in the form of water, turbulent and unforgiving.