Answer:
Please help me with the homework later
D. Hook. It is relevant to trying to 'hook' or reel in your reader for a great catch. ;)
An example:
<em>The creak grew louder. I whipped around and out of the corner of my eye, a shadow danced. I twisted back. I heard padding feet behind me. Desperate, I turned in circles as laughing began.....</em><em> </em>would that be captivating? Or what about:
<em>Yesterday was ok. We went to get ice cream. I got stawberry. But it fell on the ground. </em> Wouldn't you want to immediatly put THAT book down?
From One Smartie to another- BubbleSmartie11
The answer to this would be verbal irony.
Irony is a discrepancy or an incongruence between what is anticipated and to what it actually is. There are three types of irony. One would be verbal irony which, as the name suggests, revolves around speaking or what is said. The other two would be dramatic irony and situation irony. Dramatic irony is usually used in plays, dramas, and the like that involves the audience's awareness. Situation irony would be more involved with what's happening around.
Realism was the literary and aesthetic movement that best fits this description, so option D is the correct answer.
<h3>What was realism?</h3>
- A literary, architectural, and aesthetic movement.
- A movement that sought the credible presentation of artistic and literary elements.
- A movement that identified society as corrupt and disharmonious.
- A movement that hopeless with the future.
- A movement that sought to interpret elements literally, resignifying them.
The sentence shown above shows how realism sought artistic fragments to interpret the reality of human beings. As art makes use of subjective elements, the realists sought to resignify the elements and show them in a literal way.
More information about realism in the link:
brainly.com/question/1386444