Answer:
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<em>Showing not telling.</em>
Explanation: [I'm 13 btw]
As a young writer, I've experienced difficulty with this ''show not tell'' thing, I'm still experiencing difficulty with it till this day. But now it's a lot more easier to describe the five senses (what the characters smell, hear, or what the characters see), how a particular place looks like, or how the characters feel throughout each scene.
Showing instead of telling can help the readers reflect what the characters are feeling. Whether they are sad or angry, happy or disappointed, showing is better than telling.
I'll give you an example:
<u><em>Telling:</em></u>
Jane is feeling hot.
<u><em>Showing:</em></u>
The atmosphere of the room was so thick, that sweat showered Jane's hair, her clothes were slightly damp, as she paced up and down her room.
It's better when there is more action described than dialogues. Yes, dialogues are important, especially when characters use them... But try not to overuse it. Otherwise there is a lot more telling than showing. Try to mirror the emotions to your readers. This way your readers won't fall in a long slumber.
<em>~May it help~</em>
A. he knows he drastic change in George's manner of speaking as he is telling Lennie the story about the farm
Mary inherited her brown curly hair, her height, her eye color, and her freckles from her parents.
The evidence that her brown curly hair was inherited from her parents is that it was mentioned that she had this trait like her mother and father, and hair color/curliness is a trait that is inherited from parent to child.
Freckles and eye color is also a trait that is inherited from parent to child.
Answer:
what was the instructions? put in past tense, present, antonyms, synonyms?
Yes, I do think living a stripped-down simplified life is better.
<u>Explanation
:</u>
Life is not about wasting time making efforts to afford technology and other luxuries. It is far beyond that. A few centuries back, life was all about spending time with family and friends, caring for being in the soothing lap of nature and celebrating festivals together.
To have a modestly furnished house to live in, simple food full of all essential nutrients and long-lasting conversations with the desired company can bring a lot of happiness. Striving for more than the basic necessities leads to stress, unhealthy competition, crimes, social ills, and unhappiness. Greed has no limit. It goes beyond the Infinite. Selfishness accompanies greed. People spend a whole lifetime to earn to afford luxuries and then spend money fighting ailments.
Technology and other luxuries should be kept in check. They should be used to improve human understanding and increase comfort but not to an extent that mars the joys of living a carefree lifetime. ‘Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown’ should not govern one’s life.
History validates the fact that the most learned scholars and spiritualists lived a simple and modest life, staying busy in their intellectual and spiritual pursuits with no distractions. Mahatma Gandhi is one example.