If indirect, the quotations are not needed. So, your answer would be false.
Generally, the elements of drama that reveal the traits and motivations of the character to the audience are plot and dialogue, but other elements may do this as well.
Answer:
This question obviously asks for a student opinion, but there is evidence to support both sides of the argument. In Act 2, Friar Laurence states his opinion that Romeo does indeed fall in love too quickly. Romeo is arguably in love with being in love more than he is in love with any particular woman. The speed with which his affections shift from Rosaline to Juliet – all before he ever exchanges a word with the latter – suggests that Romeo's feelings of 'love' are closer to lust than commitment. This interpretation is supported by the numerous sexual references in the play, which are even interwoven with religious imagery in Romeo and Juliet's first conversation. However, it also possible to argue that Romeo's lust does not invalidate the purity of his love. Romeo and Juliet celebrates young, passionate love, which includes physical lust. Furthermore, whereas Romeo was content to pine for Rosaline from afar, his love for Juliet forces him to spring into action. He is melancholy over Rosaline, but he is willing to die for Juliet. Therefore, a possible reading is that Romeo and Juliet's relationship might have been sparked by physical attraction, but it grew into a deep, spiritual connection.
Hope this helps!
Explanation:
Answer:
After doing a close reading, you should analyze the figurative language in a text for the following reason:
b. to reveal hidden meanings.
Explanation:
If a reader relies only on what is denotative, that is, on what is on the surface, he or she will certainly be missing out on a lot of messages that can only be perceived and understood with an open mind and thorough eyes which also attain to what is connotative, that is, to what is between the lines and goes way beyond the core meaning of words.
In Voltaire's "Candide", the main character starts to lead a farmer's life and his friend Pangloss suggests they are living in the best of possible worlds, to which Candide responds with the classic line:
“That is very well put . . . but we must cultivate our garden.”
The author is certainly not literally talking about a garden; he is rather symbolically referring to something that is much more profound and meaningful and lies within the very essence of mankind. Therefore, there is indeed a hidden meaning in those words, and it must be analyzed and interpreted so the reader can better profit from the text.
Answer:
Well, think about this, do you want to tell someone else’s story and hold it close to pretend it’s your own... or have a personal story that I can help you write? What’s something that’s been bothering you lately about the way people around you act, what’s a realization about yourself you came to and made you realize you needed to change, maybe you watched someone close to you suffer through something and you can elaborate on how that might’ve changed you. This assignment is asking, scratch that, practically begging to be dramatic and heartfelt. So put your strongest experience into it. It’s also got to b under 1000 words so focus on a moment or the time when it really hit you, briefly explain the situation and go in depth into the moment your world just went boom n how it changed you. That’s all I can really help with without more details, hope it helps !