Answer:
Explanation:
the excessive pride that causes a protagonist to exceed his or her limits and leads to his or her downfall --- hubris
the purpose of tragedy, which is the purging of the audience's negative emotions after witnessing the downfall of a heroic person -- catharsis
the protagonist's tragic flaw, which when combined with factors of destiny beyond the protagonist's control, lead to his or her downfall -- hamartia
the opening scene of a play that provides background information and introduces the central conflict -- prologue
the force that the ancient Greeks believed controlled and molded human lives and was beyond their control -- fate
the reversal of the protagonist's fortune after receiving a major piece of information -- peripeteia
the revelation of a major piece of information that impacts the protagonist's actions from that point onward -- anagnorisis
Answer:
Beatty orders Montag to burn the house by himself with his flamethrower
and warns that the Hound is on the watch for him if he tries to escape.
Montag burns everything, and when he is finished, Beatty places him under
arrest.
Explanation:
Correct me if I'm wrong
In the play Macbeth, the main character, Macbeth transforms from a gallant war hero to a tyrannical murderer. As soon as Macbeth enters this life filled with tyranny his fate is doomed to a tragic downfall. Throughout the play, Shakespeare makes Macbeth responsible for his actions but Shakespeare also uses other characters as influences upon him which gives the character of Macbeth only partial responsibility for what he has done. In the scenes which lead up to the murder of Duncan, Shakespeare uses Lady Macbeth as an unnatural being with a strong influence on Macbeth who drives Macbeth to his fatal flaw which is similar to the witches in the beginning of the play. In order to gain control over Macbeth