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noname [10]
3 years ago
8

In Act III of the play, Mark Antony speaks at the funeral of his friend, Julius Caesar.

English
1 answer:
Deffense [45]3 years ago
8 0

Answer:

C. In the text, Antony is mournful and still, while in the film he is angry and animated.

Explanation:

In the text, you can tell just by the description and how he is talking that he is mournful and sad. But in the film, he is presented as angry and not so much in deep grief.

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The second to last one 

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PLS PLS PLS PLS HELP
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a story about a little girl called bertha,who was extra ordinarily good.

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1. What are the four objectives of a speech introduction?
neonofarm [45]

Answer:

1.What are the four objectives of a speech introduction?

Introducing the topic of the speech.

Getting the Interest of the directed audience

Basis for establishing credibility

Preview the body of the speech.

2.What are seven methods you can use in the introduction to get the attention and interest of your audience?

Quote  

Relevant quote can help set the tone for the rest of a speech.  

“What If” Scenario  

It helps in drawing the audience into your speech works wonders.  

Imagine” Scenario  

Puts your audience members directly into the presentation by allowing each member to visualize  

Question  

Relevant question gets the attention of the audience

Silence  

Audiences expect a speaker to immediately. An extra pause brings all the attention right Attention required

Statistic  

It triggers the audiences’ emotional appeal.  

Powerful Statement/Phrase  

phrase can catch the audience’s attention by keeping them guessing as to what you’re about to say next or do

3.Why is it important to establish your credibility at the beginning of your speech?

It is important to establish credibility at the beginning of your speech, so that your audience knows how and why you are qualified to speak on a topic.

4.What is a preview statement? Why should you nearly always include a preview statement in the introduction of your speech?

The preview statement is a critical moment in your speech, that moment you provide a road-map to your content. It needs to be carefully composed and carefully delivered. It needs to suggest the number, content and strategic ordering of your main points.  A solid preview statement pulls your presentation out of the introduction and places the audience's attention firmly into the main body of your speech.

5.What are six tips for your introduction?

Gain Audience Attention and Interest. The first major purpose of an introduction is to gain your audience's attention and make them interested in what you have to say. ...

State the Purpose of Your Speech. ...

Establish Credibility. ...

Provide Reasons to Listen. ...

Preview Main Ideas.

6. What are the major functions of a speech conclusion?

The conclusion of the essay. The function of the essay's Conclusion is to restate the main argument. It reminds the reader of the strengths of the argument: that is, it reiterates the most important evidence supporting the argument.

7.What are two ways you can signal the end of your speech?

Bookend Close

For a bookend speech closing, refer back to your opening anecdote  

Quotation Close

Use a famous quotation to harness the audience’s attention, much like turning on a spotlight.

8.What are four ways to reinforce the central idea when concluding your speech?

Summarize your speech

End with a quotation

Make a dramatic statement

What are four tips for your conclusion?

9.What are four tips for your conclusion?

Make it short.

Be real.

Make any beneficial or necessary disclaimers.

Summarize the article.

Explanation:

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3 years ago
I need help with the question
Phoenix [80]
Declarative if i am not mistaken
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What does the storm in Othello Act 2 Scene 1 stands for? <br> detailed.
sashaice [31]

Answer: Storm imagery is deeply significant in Shakespeare – cf King Lear, Macbeth and The Tempest. The storm represents chaos in the macrocosm that presages chaos in the microcosm of Othello’s soul. There was no storm in Cinthio’s tale (probable source).

Explanation:

Real storm – Othello entrusts Desdemona to Iago’s care during the crossing. In a tragic sense, he continues to leave Desdemona in Iago’s hands or at his mercy, throughout the play. Desdemona survives the natural storm, which lets ‘go safely by / the divine Desdemona’ II, i, l.68-73. Iago’s storm, an unnatural one, cannot be seen and will destroy her – it’s something so unnatural and malicious that it’s beyond her ken – she has no hope of surviving it. Shakespeare is aware that naivety and innocence may be attractive and laudable but they are also qualities which, if not tempered with experience and wisdom, will make a character very vulnerable.

The storm creates a frightening and uncertain atmosphere which unsettles the audience and renders us aware of the vulnerability of the characters. Cassio comments, ‘I have lost him on a dangerous sea’ (II,i l.46), prefiguring him losing Othello in a worse storm. He explains, ‘the great contention of the sea and skies / Parted our fellowship’ (II,i l.92-3), prefiguring Iago separating them later.

The elements are threatening: they ‘cast water on the burning bear’ and ‘Quench the guards of the ever fixed pole’ (the guards are two stars in the little bear); vital navigation aids are lost to sight, paralleling the psychological world of Othello: ‘passion having my best judgement collided [darkened] / Assays to lead the way’ II,iii..195-8. This shows that Othello has a degree of self-knowledge (this is his natural state of self-awareness) but suggests his underlying vulnerability to strong emotion and difficulty in governing it – which Iago will pinpoint and exploit.

Othello uses storm imagery on several occasions, referring to himself as a ‘labouring bark’ and Desdemona as the ‘calm’ harbour in the storm of life, a common enough image: women were supposed to create a domestic harbour for their men. When his bloody thoughts are sweeping him along he compares them to the Pontic sea, ‘Whose icy current and compulsive course / Ne’er feels retiring ebb, but keeps due on’ III, iii l.461-2.

The sea imagery continues throughout the play. At the end Othello comments, ‘Here is my journey’s end’, the ‘very sea-mark of my utmost sail’ V,ii l.268-9 ie the storm winds of passion lead to the calm of death cf Antony and Cleopatra. It’s also symptomatic of the fact that his moral world is no longer confused – he recognises evil in Iago and good in Desdemona.

For more see Othello lecture notes here. http://www.english-lecturer.co.uk/resources/Othello.pdf

5 0
3 years ago
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