1. Inside quotation marks
2. It really comes from the imagination, just imagine yourself in the writing you are making, it helps me a lot
3. Depends on what kind of writing it is, if it is a graded essay, I recommend a lot of varied transition words and connecting words to other sentences or paragraphs, but if it is just a chill kinda writing just add a lot of words that mean the same thing you are trying to say, or as I call them "smart sounding words"
4. It's important to use a personal touch because it makes your writing unique to others, for example if you were to write a book and I were to write a book about the same topic, we wouldn't have the same book word for word, we would have our own personal touch to make it unique.
5.one way to add humor into your writing that I use personally is making a character sarcastic, it lightens the mood if your story is more on the darker side.
I don't know if this is a test if it is and it's multiple choice just send me the choices and I'll be happy to help you! -k
The quotation from "The Black Cat" that best supports the inference that the cat represents the narrator's sense of guilt is:
4. "... to find the hot breath of the thing upon my face, and its vast weight - an incarnate Night-Mare that I had no power to shake off - incumbent eternally upon my heart!"
- The "Black Cat" is a short story by American author Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849).
- In this horror story, the narrator develops a strange hatred for his pet black cat. He kills it, only to find another cat, similar to it, except for a mark on its chest.
- The narrator tries to kill this second cat too. Instead, during the fight that ensues, he kills his wife.
- He walls his wife's body along with the cat, although he did not notice the cat was there. It is the cat that alerts the police with its noises, leading them to find the woman's body.
- The cat is, thus, the narrator's guilt, the feeling that <u>ends up revealing the crime</u>. Notice that the narrator compares the cat to the feeling of a heavy chest - guilty people often feel they are carrying a weight inside their chests.
- Guilt <u>does not go away easily</u>, just like the cat. Guilt comes back, rendering us powerless until we confess or someone finds out. Again, that is what the narrator says, and that is what the cat does.
- In conclusion, the fourth option is the quotation that best supports the comparison between the cat and the narrator's guilt.
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VZ are the next ones i believe
Answer:
Harvey 's dream" by Stephen King is the story of a man who has nightmares about a terrible accident, which may or may not come true. The moral of the story is to never dismiss a dream because it may one day become a reality. The author is attempting to persuade the reader to analyse the aspects of one's dreams in order to discern what our subconscious mind placed there and what is merely a product of our imagination.
The theme of the story is mystery;We may detect misery, despair, and anxiety inside the mystery. Harvey, the husband who is describing the dream, and Janet, the wife who is listening to the dream, are the two primary characters in the story. The scenario is their kitchen table, and the tension is that the husband is telling his wife about a dreadful dream he had, while the lady listens and gradually becomes nervous about how real his dream seems, to the point of headache.
This is the moment when we realized that to her it is not just a scary dream, these things happening in it are real, they are relatable and scarily accurate. A quote that makes us realize just how real a dream can be is when the author says "dreams are poems from the subconscious", because we start evaluating all the dreams we can remember.
Stephen King did an excellent job of depicting both aspects of the story: the mundane and decaying lives of a married couple who had ceased living, as well as the anxiety of our worst fears becoming a reality. We never acquired anything that didn't connect to the lesson of the narrative since the author delivered purpose and consistency throughout the whole story. King has exploited two opposing and concurrent human phobias, making us understand how much we don't want it to happen in our own lives.
But overall in conclusion this built up amount of fear and distraught was not only being played in Janet and Havey's mind it was all surrounding around Harveys alheimers desease. Sadly the story ends when Harvey answers a phone call, as he did in his dream, presumably confirming Janet's mounting fears that the events of the dream are true.
Explanation:
Oh my wow im so glad I read the book and watched the movie or I would've been here all night ..