Answer:
When the writer knows a character's motivations, she can write actions that make sense for that character in a specific situation. ... Knowledge of character motivation—knowledge of who the character is and why he is that way—helps the writer add layers and depth, veracity and cohesion, to story. It gives truth to fiction
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
Present perfect
Explanation:
The tense of the italicized verb 'have moved' would be present perfect as it denotes a past event/action having its present consequences. <u>Present perfect tense primarily functions to express the actions that took place before now at an unspecified time</u>. It combines the present(through use of 'have') and past(by showing perfection or completion of the action 'moved') and that's how it signals the association between the past and the present. Thus, <em>the use of 'have' followed by past participle signals that present perfect tense is employed in the sentence</em>.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Dylan was working day and night to make the material available, but he didn't think what he was doing in terms of business.
Dylan and his friend, Michael Underwood, had been writing up their lecture notes and selling them to other students.
For several years he will have been trying to put a good idea into a successful business via the Internet.
Dylan is still looking for a way to make his website work as a business.
He won't be doing anything special to celebrate the occasion, mainly because his business venture won't have made any money for most of the past year.
He has thought about taking a teaching job after seeing an ad for a teacher of business writing with business experience.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
Instruments
Explanation:
There are hundreds, if not thousands of types of instruments across the world. That is way too broad for a topic.
 
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Based on the language in this poem just a casual note left on the table. to resemble a casual note not anything else