D. Offensive
If a comment is culturally insensitive, it’s one that may be considered offensive to certain groups or cultures
You can write a fictional scene where a king is betrayed by his own son who wants to usurp the throne, and you can use a third-person point of view.
<h3>How to write a scene</h3>
To write this fictional scene, you must first decide what you want to write about. We can, for instance, think of a scene in which betrayal is involved. Therefore, the elements of the scene would be the following:
- Point of view: third person limited.
- Setting: 16th century, Iberian Peninsula, a castle.
- Characters: King Carlos and his son Prince Henrique.
- Conflict: character vs character. Prince Henrique has betrayed his own father.
An example of such a scene would be the following:
- "You?" the king's voice resonated, even though it sounded broken for the first time in his life. Prince Henrique's footsteps echoed in the hall as he walked towards his father, the cold stone walls of the throne room reverberating as if an earthquake were taking place with each step he took. Henrique shrugged, "I'm surprised you didn't see it coming, father." King Carlos could no longer stand. He fell back onto the throne, dropping his sword. Outside, he could hear the screams and the clashing, metallic sounds he knew so well. A battle was taking place, and man against man, sword against sword, violence reigned. Henrique unsheathed his own sword. "I do not wish to kill you, old man. Surrender already." Carlos reached for his own fallen sword and grasped its golden hilt. "I never thought I would have to murder my own son," he whispered. "But you are a traitor, Henrique, and no traitor shall remain alive."
The scene above is simply an example. Feel free to adapt it and add details.
Learn more about writing scenes here:
brainly.com/question/27984231
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Answer:
"The span of my hips",
"The flash of my teeth",
"The swing of my waist",
"The stride of my breasts".
Explanation:
The poem "Phenomenal Woman" by Maya Angelou is a poem about a woman confident of her looks and doesn't care about what other people may think or say. She is happy with herself, contented and confident of her own uniqueness.
Irony is a literary figure of speech where what is said differs from what is actually meant. The actual meaning of the thing meant is opposite to how it was said. She uses irony in the poem to assert the fact that beauty is just skin deep, no matter what the perception may be. By refuting the theory that beautiful women are born in a specific way, she asserts that all women are beautiful in their own ways. They just need the confidence to accept that. Contrasting to the normal norms of beautiful woman being fair skinned and tall and thin, Maya exclaims that she, even though an African-American, is beautiful too. This is seen in the lines <em>"The span of my hips", "the flash of my teeth", "the swing of my waist", "the stride of my breasts" </em>etc. She is confidently refuting the perception of a beautiful woman as a thin, tall, fair body.