<em>In medias res </em>means in the middle of the action.
<em>In medias res</em> is a literary term that<u> is used to refer to a text that starts in the middle of the plot instead of starting with the beginning of the story</u>. When writers employ <em>in medias res</em>, they usually present the events that happened before by means of flashbacks or dialogue. Famous literary works such as Homer's <em>Iliad</em> and<em> Odyssey </em>and Shakespeare's <em>Hamlet </em>begin in medias res; in other words, <u>they go straight to the heart of the plot</u>.
Answer:
1.My cat loves salmon she goes crazy when she smells it.
2.Donna lives in Orlando her school in Winter Park is not within walking distance.
3.Her husband is a software engineer he designs computer programs.
Explanation:
The three sentences above each have two independent sentences that should be linked by a punctuation (a comma, semicolon or semicolon) or by a preposition that connects them in a coherent way and makes the reading more fluid and paused. However, this did not happen and the two sentences were joined without any connective between them, but they are capable of providing a coherent and understandable thought. When this occurs, it is called a fused (or run-on) sentence.
<span>In this question, the authorial voice is best described as the voice used by the voice used by authors when seeming to speak for themselves. The historical author is the one writing the text and his or her opinions may or may not be in the text itself; the "author," meanwhile, is the one who the reader perceives to be behind the narration. The fictional narrator is separate from the author and often has a different personality or point of view altogether. </span>
Answer:
wrath.........is your answer